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American Buffalo
Home TROUBLED
HERDS
Today, the results of Hornaday's labors can be seen in Yellowstone, which is now home to more than 2,000 free-roaming bison. Other smaller herds can be found on ranches around the nation and in Canada. Together, they total more than 200,000 animals. Despite its inspiring comeback, however, the Yellowstone herd has become enmeshed in several heated debates over how the park's wildlife should be managed. One involves efforts to reintroduce wolves -- one of the bison's few natural predators -- back into the park. Though more than a dozen of the efficient hunters were successfully released into the park several years ago, adjoining farmers have successfully sued to force the National Park Service to remove the wolves, claiming that they threaten livestock. For the moment, however, the wolves remain, awaiting the results of an appeal. The other controversy involves the bison more directly. It has its roots in a 1917 discovery that some of the wild bison carry Brucellosis, a bacterial disease that causes miscarriages in cattle. Though scientists have never documented a case in which the bison have transmitted Brucellosis to cattle on ranches adjoining the park, ranchers are allowed to kill any bison that leave the park each winter in search of food. In the winter of 1996, the practice became the subject of international protests when stockmen killed more than 1,000 bison -- over a quarter of the total herd at that time. Environmentalists and Native American tribes oppose the killing, saying alternatives exist. One, for example, would be to move bison that have left the park to lands owned by native tribes interested in rebuilding their own herds. So far, however, Montana and federal government officials have remained firm in their belief that the modern buffalo hunt is the best way to reduce the disease threat.
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