| West
Yellowstone, MT- Gallatin County resident Joe
Strusz locked himself to the Horse Butte bison capture
facility this morning, halting an operation to capture
twenty bison that migrated to the butte two days ago.
Strusz secured his arms to the gate of the facility
with chains inside of a steal pipe at 8 AM, just as
the capture operation was beginning.
According
to Strusz, "This capture facility is a blight on our
National Forests. I'll unlock when Gallatin National
Forest takes the facility down and allows bison to use
public lands. Bison should be accorded all the rights
of wildlife and left undisturbed to graze where they
see fit."
Later in the morning, MDOL agents removed Strusz from
the facility after they disassembled parts of the corral
with a crane truck. He was arrested and charged with
trespassing and obstruction. When the facility was put
back together the capture operation continued with nine
agents on snowmobiles hazing the bison into the trap.
The bison evaded the snowmobiles for about an hour,
at one point being pushed through a barbed wire fence
before being captured.
Government
agencies including the Montana Department of Livestock
(MDOL), Gallatin National Forest, National Park Service,
and Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks have killed over
3,200 Yellowstone bison since 1985. The slaughter is
based on the unsubstantiated fear that bison will transmit
brucellosis to cattle. There has never been a documented
case of transmission from bison to cattle in a natural
setting.
Strusz
said of the slaughter, "Bison and livestock have co-mingled
in Grand Teton National Park for more than 45 years
without a single case of transmission. If the government
really believes there is a risk, they should manage
the cattle, not slaughter the bison."
In fact, there are no cattle in the area until June
15th, well after Yellowstone bison traditionally return
to the park. Brucellosis bacteria have been shown to
live for only a matter of days when exposed to the elements.
Any risk of transmission could be eliminated by keeping
a time and space separation between the cattle and bison.
Buffalo Field Campaign (BFC) spokesperson Peter Leusch
stated, "Instead of wasting millions of taxpayer dollars
a year to slaughter bison, managers should focus on
the cattle. If there truly is a risk of transmission,
the Forest Service should cancel the grazing allotments
surrounding Yellowstone."
BFC
volunteers documented grizzly bear tracks on Horse Butte
this morning. In addition, bald eagles were seen in
the air, with a protected nest located about a quarter
mile north of the bison capture facility. Gallatin National
Forest has failed to consider the impacts that bison
management activities have on other wildlife that rely
on Horse Butte.
Leusch said, "These operations continue to threaten
endangered species like grizzly bears and bald eagles
as well as elk, moose, trumpeter swans and a host of
other wildlife. Not only are bison being needlessly
slaughtered, but the whole west side of the ecosystem
is also threatened. This is simply a bureaucratic boondoggle
where wildlife, the American people, and the local economy
lose out to the unfounded fears of the livestock industry."
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