| YELLOWSTONE
BISON BORDER SHOOT BEGINS
It's Opening Day for Montana's Bison Hunt
Exclusive BFC Video & Photos Available Upon Request
For Immediate Release: Wednesday, November 15, 2006
Contact: BFC, Stephany Seay 406-646-0070 |
| WEST
YELLOWSTONE & GARDINER, MONTANA. Today
marks the opening day of Montana's bison hunt. America's
last wild herd, the Yellowstone bison are enjoyed and
admired by millions of national park visitors, yet between
today and February 15 they will be targets for gunners
along Park borders. Montana has issued 140 permits to
kill Yellowstone bison that enter the state.
A bull bison was shot this morning along the Madison
River, less than a quarter of a mile from the western
boundary of Yellowstone National Park. Another bull
was killed just outside of the Park's northern boundary,
near Gardiner.
Buffalo Field Campaign (BFC) a Montana-based wild bison
advocacy group that opposes the current bison management
will be monitoring and documenting the hunt. BFC aims
to educate hunters regarding the extreme mismanagement
of the Yellowstone bison and bolster support for bison
conservation in Montana.
"Our position is clear," said Mike Mease,
BFC co-founder, "No habitat, no hunt."
Wild bison are ecologically extinct in Montana and through
a joint state-federal agency plan are subjected to harassment
or death any time they enter the state. Montana is a
critical part of the bison's native habitat.
The Montana Department of Livestock (DOL) is the authorizing
agency of the hunt, yet this agency lacks any training
in or knowledge of wildlife management. The DOL was
authorized to harass bison up to a week before the hunt
began. Last year the DOL cancelled the bison hunt
to harass a group of 40 bison that were within the hunting
zone. Their actions caused 14 bison to fall through
the ice of Hebgen Lake. Two bison drowned; the rest
were eventually sent to slaughter.
BFC strongly opposes the current bison hunt and calls
on Montana to provide substantial habitat throughout
state, allowing bison to establish a viable resident
population. BFC also calls for stripping the DOL of
any and all bison management authority.
"This hunt is extremely premature," said Buffalo
Field Campaign (BFC) spokeswoman Stephany Seay. "Wild
bison are ecologically extinct in Montana. The state
currently doesn't value bison as a native wildlife species
and livestock interests are calling the shots. Bison
must be provided year-round habitat and be allowed to
recover their native Montana range," Seay maintained.
American Bison once spanned the continent, numbering
between 30 and 50 million. The Yellowstone bison are
America's only continuously wild herd, numbering fewer
than 4,000 animals, diminished to less than .01 percent
of the bison's former population.
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