| Gardiner,
MT -Park rangers captured 33 wild buffalo in
the Stephens Creek trap near the north entrance of Yellowstone
National Park this morning. None of the buffalo ever
left the park. The Park's public affairs office was
unavailable for comment on the operation.
Buffalo Field Campaign spokesperson Mike Mease, who
witnessed the capture, noted the irony of Park employees
capturing buffalo inside the park, "These Park
Rangers have no right wearing buffalo on their badges
as they haze and capture the buffalo they're entrusted
with protecting. If buffalo are not safe in Yellowstone,
then where are they safe?"
The Yellowstone herd is the only continuously wild herd
in the United States. It is descended from just 23 wild
bison that survived the mass eradication of the 19th
century and is the largest remaining single population
of genetically pure bison.
This is the first time the Stephens Creek trap has been
used since March 2003, when Park Rangers captured 231
buffalo in Yellowstone and handed them over to the Montana
Department of Livestock without ever testing them for
brucellosis, the supposed justification for the slaughter.
The DOL shipped all 231 to slaughter.
The Park Service is one of five federal and state agencies
participating in the Interagency Bison Management Plan.
The plan will cost taxpayers $50 million over the next
14 years. State and Federal agencies have killed 2,513
buffalo in the past ten years.
During this morning's capture operation a pronghorn
antelope was caught in the haze. The area between Gardiner
and Stephens Creek, where the capture operation occurred,
provides the only winter range for Yellowstone antelope,
a Species of Special Concern. Human activities, like
buffalo capture operations, negatively impact the pronghorn,
whose numbers have plummeted from more than 600 to less
than 200 in recent years.
On Tuesday the Montana Department of livestock captured
18 buffalo near West Yellowstone and sent ten to slaughter.
Of the eight that were shaved, tagged, dyed, and released
Wednesday on the Horse Butte Peninsula, five were yearling
calves. Several showed signs of injuries suffered in
captivity, such as falling down upon release and leaving
a trail of hair and blood. At least four of the released
calves are now orphans with little chance of survival,
as their mothers were sent to slaughter.
The Buffalo Field Campaign is the only group working
in the field, everyday, to stop the slaughter of Yellowstone's
wild buffalo. Volunteers defend the buffalo on their
traditional habitat and advocate for their protection.
Daily patrols stand with the buffalo on the ground they
choose to be on and document every move made against
them.
Video footage and Interviews Available Upon Request
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