| Gardiner,
MT –
Park rangers captured approximately 74 buffalo in Yellowstone
National Park this morning, bringing the total captured
since last Saturday to 163. Of the 89 captured in operations
last Saturday and Tuesday, 53 were turned over to the
Montana Department of Livestock (DOL) on Wednesday and
Thursday for slaughter. None of the captured buffalo
ever stepped foot outside the world’s first national
park. Buffalo Field Campaign (BFC) volunteers documented
the operations.
“Yellowstone used to be a wildlife sanctuary.
Under the watch of Superintendent Suzanne Lewis it has
been transformed into a buffalo slaughter facility set
up to do the bidding of Montana’s livestock industry,”
said Dan Brister, Project Coordinator of the Buffalo
Field Campaign.
Yellowstone is the only place in America continuously
inhabited by wild buffalo. The park provided sanctuary
to 23 buffalo that survived the mass eradication of
the 19th century. The Yellowstone herd comprises the
largest remaining population of genetically pure bison.
Contrary to claims made by the DOL, the slaughtered
buffalo tested positive for exposure to brucellosis,
not the disease itself. “Trying to eradicate buffalo
by killing exposed buffalo is like trying to eradicate
chicken pox by killing everyone who has ever had them,”
Brister said. “Just because buffalo are exposed
and have developed antibodies doesn’t mean they
are infectious.”
There has never been a documented transmission of brucellosis
from wild buffalo to livestock.
Today’s capture brings the total number of Yellowstone
buffalo trapped this winter to 163. 63 were slaughtered
and two were shot in the field. In the past ten years
the DOL and NPS have slaughtered 2,566 buffalo in and
around Yellowstone National Park.
The recent slaughter has prompted members of Congress
to introduce the Yellowstone Buffalo Preservation Act
(H.R. 3446), which will place a three year moratorium
on the capture and slaughter of Yellowstone buffalo,
dismantle the Stephen’s Creek trap, and allow
buffalo unfettered access to public lands immediately
adjacent to the park. The bill currently has more than
60 co-sponsors in the House of Representatives.
According to a press release issued by the park, the
current slaughter is designed to keep buffalo “away
from cattle grazing adjacent to the park.” The
closest livestock are located on lands belonging to
the Church Universal and Triumphant (CUT). Taxpayers
paid the Church more than $13 million on conservation
easements and acquisition of CUT lands to protect bison
and other wildlife in 1998.
According to the unreliable test, just 36 buffalo tested
negative for brucellosis antibodies and will be confined
in the trap until spring. Twenty-four yearlings and
calves are being experimented on with the livestock
vaccine RB51, which is known to be ineffective in bison.
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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