Two bulls butt heads outside Yellowstone National Park near Gardiner. (James Woodcock/Billings Gazette)

Two bulls butt heads outside Yellowstone National Park near Gardiner. (James Woodcock/Billings Gazette)

The Gros Ventre and Assiniboine tribes who live on Montana’s Fort Belknap Reservation, and the Northern Arapaho and Shoshone tribes on the Wind River Reservation in Wyoming have long sought the several dozen bison corralled in holding pens for nearly four years now after straying beyond the borders of Yellowstone National Park.

Ranchers fear the park’s bison carry brucellosis, a disease that causes stillborn calves. For years now, when bison go outside in the park in search of winter forage, they’ve been slaughtered to prevent the spread of the disease.

But some bison, after being declared disease-free, were spared. They’re the ones in the holding pens, and the idea is to use them to repopulate public and tribal lands across the West with free-roaming bison, writes the AP’s Matthew Brown, here.

However, those animals apparently will be relocated to a Montana ranch owned by billionaire Ted Turner, under a recommendation made by state and federal officials.

Turner already owns about 50,000 bison, and his restaurant chain Ted’s Montana Grill serves buffalo burgers. But Turner Enterprises general manager Russell Miller says the Yellowstone bison won’t be served up on a bun, and that the genetically pure Yellowstone bison will be kept separate from the others on his ranch.

Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks administrator Ken McDonald tells Brown that giving up bison to Turner’s ranch was not his preferred choice, and that his agency already is getting “a lot of backlash over the whole privatization thing.”

The tribes’ applications were judged insufficient, but officials say they’ll be given first choice the next time bison are available.

Gwen Florio

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This entry was posted on Wednesday, November 11th, 2009 at 11:48 am and is filed under Assiniboine, Fort Belknap Indian Reservation, Gros Ventre, Northern Arapaho, Shoshone, Wind River Reservation, bison. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

One comment

Khiem
 1 

Another way to screw the Native Americans. I’m not an expert on the problems of reservations, but if you want to at least try to eliminate poverty, alcoholism, lack of education, at least make an attempt to revitalize their culture. Bison have always been a huge part of native american culture.

I believe their culture was their strength and the loss of bison, along with their traditional homelands, eventually led to their eventual decline as a great people.

February 3rd, 2010 at 4:19 am

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