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Wild Bison Of The Yellowstone Should Not Be Slaughtered Because A Few Ranchers

Friday, September 30th, 2011 at 11:56 AM

Wild Bison Of The Yellowstone Should Not Be Slaughtered Because A Few Ranchers

Letters to the AmmoLand Editor

Letters to the AmmoLand Editor: Got something on your mind? Let us know and you can see it here.

Montana --(Ammoland.com)- I firmly believe that the wild bison of the Yellowstone Ecosystem should not be slaughtered simply because a few ranchers outside of the historic entrance to Yellowstone National Park think that wild bison spread disease, which has not been proven scientifically.

What has been proven is that domestic animals spread disease to various types of wildlife.

Furthermore, I firmly believe that all wild bison should be hunted without roaming restrictions and I support efforts by Montana Dept. of Fish, Wildlife and Parks to relocate wild bison to various public land masses. I also support the relocation of excess wild bison to other state, tribal and federal land systems.

Wild bison are not cattle or other domestic animals and should never be managed by the Montana Dept. of Livestock. They are not livestock.

As a Montana hunter, I firmly believe that excess wild bison should be hunted under the rules of Fair Chase and that wild bison should be allowed to roam outside Yellowstone National Park without being slaughtered by paid shooters.

For years I have supported the permit hunting of wild excess bison within the boundaries of Yellowstone National Park during a special hunting season. Money collected from these hunting licenses would then go back to the management of wild bison. I also support the legal hunting of wildlife within the boundaries of other national parks where populations of some wildlife are in excess of the land’s carry load, such as the elk population of Rocky Mountain National Park in Colorado.

I do not support the introduction of wolves to national parks to control excess wildlife populations of cervids and believe that the natural reproduction of wolves in the wild is the appropriate way to allow wolves to thrive. I also believe that excess populations of wolves must be reduced through legal hunting, not sharpshooting.

In the spirit of Theodore Roosevelt, Aldo Leopold, Ding Darling, Horace Albright and those Americans that began our public land systems in the early 1900s at the state and federal level, I say, the wildlife and its habitat cannot speak, so I must and I do and so must we all for those wildlife.

Susan Campbell Reneau
Blue Mountain, Montana
 
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Montana Deer Lodge Meeting Set for Oct. 5 on Interim Bison Relocation

Friday, September 30th, 2011 at 11:50 AM

Montana Deer Lodge Meeting Set for Oct. 5 on Interim Bison Relocation Environmental Assessment

Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks

Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks

MALTA, Mont. --(Ammoland.com)- Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks will host a public meeting in Deer Lodge Oct. 5 to discuss and seek comment on an environmental assessment of interim placement locations and management for about 150 disease-free bison pending the development of a statewide bison conservation strategy.

The interim locations assessed include FWP’s 28,000-acre Spotted Dog WMA near Avon and the 5,800-acre Marias River WMA near Shelby. Also under consideration are the Fort Belknap Indian Reservation near Malta and the Fort Peck Indian Reservation near Wolf Point. Under the proposal, bison could be moved to one or any combination of the potential locations.

The public meeting in Deer Lodge will be held Oct. 5 at 6:30 p.m. at the Community Center, 146 Cottonwood Street; in Shelby on Oct. 6, at 6:30 p.m.at the Marias River Electric Cooperative, 910 Roosevelt Highway; and Oct. 17 at 7 p.m. at the Glasgow Civic Center, 319 3rd Street S.

The bison are part of a project that began in 2004 aimed at determining if bison can be kept free of the bacteria that causes brucellosis, a disease that results in miscarriages in some pregnant animals, including domestic cattle, and bison and elk. The bison, which were repeatedly tested for the disease, are considered brucellosis-free, but to complete the feasibility study additional follow-up testing will continue.

FWP Wildlife Bureau Chief Ken McDonald said the goal is to relocate up to 150 of the disease-free bison from the quarantine facility and from a temporary site at the Green Ranch near Bozeman. A “no action” alternative would have the bison remain at these locations.

Should the animals be relocated to the WMAs, the bison would be held for an interim period pending completion of a statewide conservation strategy which is expected by 2015. That conservation strategy would identify potential permanent locations for brucellosis-free bison.

There are no infrastructure costs associated with the interim tribal lands under consideration. A range of infrastructure improvement costs between $637,000 to $2 million are possible on the wildlife management areas for potential boundary fences, pasture fences, gates, corrals, chutes, and outbuildings.

“It’s FWP’s intention to keep monitoring and testing all of the bison at any of the interim sites,” McDonald said. Management plans for each site would also include commitments by FWP or the Tribes to immediately respond to any escapes of bison from the facilities.

For more information and to comment visit FWP online at fwp.mt.gov. Click Recent Public Notices. Comments must be received by 5 p.m. on Oct. 19.

Wild bison exist in Alaska, Arizona, Utah, Canada and other places. Today in Montana wild bison that migrate north from Yellowstone National Park are found in winter near West Yellowstone and Gardiner. In years past, animals from Yellowstone were used to help restore elk, antelope and other wildlife herds in Montana and other areas of the West.

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