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The American Bison

Image Source: cbsnews/ Bison are so superbly adapted to extremely cold temperatures that snow on their backs does not melt.

By “Sunday Morning” a videographer Judy Lehmberg.

Just imagine what the North American plains looked like when Lewis and Clark first saw them — no highways, no cars, no power lines, only the sound of the wind with mile after mile of grasses, bison, pronghorn antelope and prairie dogs. Those days are obviously gone, but today there are still places where large populations of bison can be found.

Yellowstone National Park currently holds the largest bison numbers, with a population of over 4,500.

Two hundred years ago, more than 30 million bison ranged over much of what is now the United States. Today there are only remnant populations in several protected areas, such as Yellowstone, several federally and state protected areas, and a number of private ranches. The American bison is ecologically extinct. Its population is now too small to fill the role it once played in trimming grasses, “ploughing” the ground with its hoofs, fertilizing the soil with manure, and creating bison wallows. Several species of grasses and at least one bird, the brown-headed cowbird, evolved with bison.

In 2016 President Obama signed a law making bison the national mammal of the United States.  Conservationists, bison ranchers and tribal groups were all instrumental in passing this legislation. Native Americans have long advocated for protecting and increasing bison populations, as the history of both is so closely intertwined.

American and European bison are the only species left of the eight species known from fossils. American bison are classified into two subspecies: the plains bison (Bison bison bison), formerly found in much of North America, and the wood bison (Bison bison athabascae), found in Canada‘s Wood Buffalo National Park. The history of bison in the New World shows several species existed including B. antiquus, the ancient bison and the predecessor of present-day North American bison.  Fossils of the ancient bison, a 7.5-foot-tall, 3,500-pound animal, have been found with Folsom points embedded in their bones, proving that people were hunting them over 11,000 years ago. No one knows what influence if any, Native Americans had on species such as mastodons and ancient bison, but we do know many mammal extinctions occurred during the Late Pleistocene. Modern North American bison arose from B. antiquus, and this is the species the Plains Indians depended upon. Before Spanish explorers brought horses to North America in1519, the indigenous peoples killed bison by driving them over “buffalo jump” cliffs and then finishing them off with spears and clubs. Some buffalo jumps are known today, and artefacts from ancient buffalo harvests are still being found.

Indians probably first got horses around 1650, from Santa Fe, New Mexico traders. Horses then spread from there to Nebraska by 1680, and the upper Missouri River basin by 1750. While Eastern tribes used horses for bison hunts, they were not nomadic and stuck to their maize growing and permanent lodges. In contrast, Western tribes were more nomadic. They travelled long distances following the bison herds. They used horse-drawn travois to haul their bison skin tipis, a dwelling unique to the plains people. Once they obtained horses, the Plains tribes killed bison while mounted on horseback, rather than continue to use cliffs as buffalo jumps.

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Plains tribes were always dependent on bison, before and after the acquisition of horses, and revered them in their religious ceremonies.

Between 30 to 60 million bison roamed the plains before 1800, but by 1890 only around 1,000 were left. Commercial buffalo hunting was encouraged by the U.S. Army as a way to cut the food supply from the Native Americans, and it worked. When a Pennsylvania tannery developed a method of curing buffalo hides so they could be used as commercial leather in 1871, hide prices jumped to $3.00 each. One county in Montana shipped 180,000 buffalo skins east in 1881 alone. Generals Sheridan and Sherman got their wish when hordes of hide hunters decimated buffalo herds. The bison were almost gone, and most Native Americans were on reservations.

The remnant wild bison were in Yellowstone and on some ranches, including Charles Goodnight’s ranch in Texas. Goodnight saved a small bison herd, and donated a few to Yellowstone. Only between 500 and 800 bison were on private lands, and around 50 in Yellowstone. Early efforts to protect the remaining bison included creating laws prohibiting shooting Yellowstone bison. President Theodore Roosevelt and William T. Hornaday formed the American Bison Society in 1905. Through donations, the 20,000-acre National Bison Range was purchased in Montana. Presently, that herd is managed at about 350 individuals, most descendants from the original founding group.

IMG CREDIT: takepart/ Before 1800, between 30 to 60 million bison roamed the American plains. By 1890 only around 1,000 were left.

Today, there are about 500,000 bison in North America, largely on ranches. Many of these have some cattle genes, because they shared land with domestic livestock on those ranches — bison and domestic cattle can interbreed. About 19,000 bison are on state and federally-protected land and are more genetically pure.

Because of forward-thinking individuals like Theodore Roosevelt, the American bison, which almost went the way of the passenger pigeon, is alive and thriving on both public and private lands in some of its original habitats.


Judy Lehmberg is a former college biology teacher who now shoots nature videos.

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To watch extended “Sunday Morning” Nature videos click here!

Source: cbsnews

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