Sunday 29 December 2019

Saving the Bison Range genome: Replicate it on the CMR!



Montana Senators Daines and Tester have submitted a bill, S3019, intended primarily to settle complex water-rights issues with the Kootenai/Salish tribes on the Flathead Reservation. However, the bill includes transferring the National Bison Range and its historic bison into control by the Tribes.

Being formally limited by its two stated goals, the Montana Wild Bison Restoration Coalition will not comment on transfer of the Bison Range to the Tribes. However, preservation of the bison is related to our goal of restoring bison on and near the Charles M. Russell National Wildlife Refuge.


We have submitted a letter to the senators noting the unique genetic values of Bison Range bison and the need to replicate that genome, for security, in a second herd. Moreover, the CMR Refuge is the best place for replicating the Bison Range herd. Please see our letter and register your support for saving the Bison Range herd with Senators Daines and Tester by logging on to their websites and using the “contact us” button. 


 

Wednesday 11 December 2019

Former FWP Biologists Promote Bison Restoration on CMR



Former FWP Biologists Promote Bison Restoration
Recently, nine former employees of Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks, averaging over 25 years of service each, cosigned a letter toGovernor Steve Bullock to support restoring a public, wild bison herdon the Charles M. Russell National Wildlife Refuge.
Biologists thanked Governor Bullock for vetoing, in 2017 and 2019, anti-bison legislation that would have ended any future for wild bison in Montana; but noted: “These efforts could come to naught with a new governor in 2021.” They said, “We have failed to preserve public, wild bison as anything more than seasonal, abused visitors to our state.”
The Charles M. Russell National Wildlife Refuge is the largest federal refuge within the historic range of plains bison. Elsewhere in the Great Plains, bison herds on federal and state lands do not provide herd sizes, range sizes, or habitat quality and diversity necessary for long-term preservation of truly wild bison and their wild-adapted genomes.”
Biologists noted several political and biological issues of bison restoration that indicate the CMR Refuge is the best possible location for restoring public wild bison, leaving a “long-lasting legacy of the Bullock administration for future generations of Montanans and the nation.”

Saturday 23 November 2019

Scientist Letter Recommends Prompt Wild Bison Restoration Action




News: November 8, 2019
Coordinated by this Coalition, 20 wildlife scientists from both within andwithout Montana have co-signed a letter to Governor Steve Bullock, recommending prompt action toward reestablishing a significant herd of public-trust wild bison on the Charles M. Russell National Wildlife Refuge. This follows a similar letter sent in 2014.
Scientists noted that “The once profound ecological influence of bison no longer exists on the Great Plains and the wild genotype of plains bison gradually deteriorates.” and that “The Charles M. Russell National Wildlife Refuge is the best location in Montana and on the Great Plains for restoring a biologically significant wild bison herd.”
Scientists encouraged Bullock’s leadership, and the leadership of Montana, to recover an adequate sample of this iconic species and its habitat, maintaining the state’s reputation throughout the world, and demonstrating that Montanans take their wildlife heritage – their obligation to future generations – seriously. 

 

Monday 18 November 2019

Recent Montana Wild Bison Restoration Coalition Activity




News Nov. 11, 2019
Recent Coalition Activity
Dr. Jim Bailey represented the Coalition at the American Bison Society meetings in New Mexico, October 28-30. The American Bison Society and Wildlife Conservation Society had rejected our request to describe our Coalition and its goals at the meeting, and also rejected our submissions for 2 posters to be presented. Nevertheless, Dr. Bailey was able to interact with several attending individuals who support our cause.
The theme of the conference “Restoration of bison on the edge of their historic range” did not seem to fit most of the presentations. Several presentations dealt with bison conservation in Mexico and Canada and restoration of usually small “cultural herds” on Native American reservations. There was a session on bison in Yellowstone National Park. A session on metapopulations, viability and domestication was most interesting. The U. S. Department of Interior bison management committee presented important data on genetic subpopulations within USDI herds, and Dr. Peter Dratch addressed genetic issues related to insidious domestication of federal bison.
A highlight of the meeting was a keynote address on the very many important ecological relationships of bison on the Great Plains, by Wes Olsen, Canadian biologist. Watch for Olsen’s book, The Ecological Buffalo, to be released soon.
Apparently, no abstracts or texts of presentations will be distributed.
On November 5, Dr. Bailey participated in a forum on Bison for the Charles M. Russell National Wildlife Refuge – at the University in Missoula. Paul Santavy, manager of the Refuge, and Tom France, National Wildlife Federation, were also on the program. Dr. Bailey also discussed wild bison at a Philosophy Department seminar in the afternoon.

Thursday 3 October 2019

BLM Retreats from Bison Conservation





Faced with Bureau of Land Management resistance based on opposition from local ranchers, American Prairie Reserve revised its request to convert 18 BLM grazing allotments from cattle to year-long bison grazing. All 18 allotments, totaling over 450 square miles, are attached to several APR properties.
APR currently runs about 800 bison year-round on two of its properties. On one of these, the bison access BLM allotments, as approved by BLM in 2005. Impacts of this year-round grazing have been studied since 2014.
APR proposed to convert most of its public-land allotments to bison to accommodate current growth of its bison herd and to eventually facilitate its long-term goal of having a natural large and free-ranging metapopulation of bison on a large wildlife reserve that will be available to the public. As part of the proposal, APR would remove 300 miles of interior fence once used in rotating domestic cattle among pastures. Fence removal would benefit other wildlife, especially pronghorn antelope.
As a “compromise” APR will continue year-long bison grazing on 19 square miles of public land, attached to one of its properties, as already approved in 2005. The only expansion of bison grazing will allow APR to graze bison seasonally on about 75 square miles of public land associated with 3 other of its properties.
Also, a small test of the vegetation impacts from free-ranging bison, begun in 2014 by APR, will continue. At some undesignated time in the future, results of this test will be used to reconsider APR’s original proposal. We are unaware of any BLM analysis of the 5 years’ data already accumulated by APR or of any BLM review of the effects of ongoing year-round bison grazing on federal lands in other ecosystems. Further, there seems to be no agreement on what standards will someday be used to judge the success or failure of this test.
The usual standards used by range managers for judging vegetation condition relate to a goal of maximizing annual herd productivity for economic profit. The Livestock industry has long imposed this standard on everyone else, no matter what other management objectives there may be. This is not the goal of APR and such standards will not be appropriate for judging the APR program.
APR’s goal is akin to naturalness. Natural populations may include a large standing crop of usually older animals, with a low and varying annual recruitment of young. Rather than imposed rotation grazing, bison will exercise their evolved adaptations for using a large and diverse landscape in response to the seasons, the vagaries of weather and perhaps to natural or prescribed burning of the vegetation. The expected vegetation will be a mosaic of species, density and production that results from spatial and temporal variation in bison grazing. Much land will be in prairie dog towns. This mosaic provides for a diversity of other wildlife and for health and resiliency of the entire biotic community. What standards will someday be used to assess this goal?
Moreover, a true test of year-long bison grazing should be conducted on at least 100 square miles of diverse habitat. At APR, that diverse landscape should include the south-facing, topographically diverse habitat of the Missouri breaks on the Charles M. Russell Wildlife Refuge. If we are to evaluate the effects of wild bison, we must provide them with access to use a full measure of habitat diversity.
This BLM/APR “compromise” will not advance bison conservation. It duplicates values and tests of seasonal or year-long bison grazing on several federal areas elsewhere.
APR’s long-term goal is to establish a large reserve for a diversity of wildlife that would benefit from wild, free-ranging bison as a keystone prairie species. However, attempts to restore public bison to the abundant public land in this area have been thwarted for over 100 years by the livestock industry.
Mostly, the BLM/APR “compromise” kicks the can of bison conservation, and of restoring public, wild bison to Montana, down the road again. 
 

Saturday 7 September 2019


Montana Constitution Mandates Bison Restoration
We argue that the Montana Constitution mandates restoration of public, wild bison in our state.
There are no public, wild bison, year-round, in Montana – not by the legal definition of wild bison, nor by a biological definition of wildness. (Wild Bison and the Law)
In the Preamble of our Constitution: Montanans seek “equality of opportunity”. Thus, access to bison, for harvest, viewing or reflection, should not be unduly constrained, expensive or rare for those least able to afford the cost and time involved.
Are these empty words?
Montana contains the largest, most appropriate National Wildlife Refuge for bison restoration within the native range of the species. Many recommendations to restore wild bison on the Charles M. RussellNational Wildlife Refuge have been ignored for more than a century!
Please contact Governor Steve Bullock at governor@mt.gov and FWP Director Martha Williams martha.williams@mt.gov recommending restoration of public, wild bison on the CMR National Wildlife Refuge, fulfilling a mandate of our Montana state Constitution. 

 

Saturday 18 May 2019


Drs. Frank and Deborah Popper, Rutgers and Princeton Universities, have agreed to be listed as supporters of our Coalition’s two goals.

"Montana Wild Bison Restoration Coalition's Mission is to enhance public awareness of conservation opportunities for wild, public bison in Montana; and to establish a bison herd on public land and private land where bison are accepted, within and near the Charles M. Russell National Wildlife Refuge."


In 1987, Geography professors Frank and Deborah Popper published a landmark, controversial paper describing the gradual depopulation of the arid, western Great Plains. They suggested the area could be more useful as a restored “buffalo commons”. While the Poppers recommended honest, objective discussion of the issue, considerable passionate acrimony resulted. However, the Poppers’ predictions have been vindicated. Most counties in the arid Great Plains continue to gradually decline today; and there remains a need for objective discussion of issues and opportunities related to bison restoration. 

 

Wednesday 1 May 2019

Montana Wild Bison Coalition in Great Falls Public Forum




Coalition in Great Falls public forum
Dr. Jim Bailey will present the rationale for and goals of the Coalition at a public forum sponsored by the Upper Missouri Breaks Audubon Society in Great Falls on:
Monday, May 13th
7PM 
Fish, Wildlife & Parks Headquarters on Giant Springs Road.

Governor Bullock Vetoes HB 132




Bullock vetoes HB 132
April 29th, Governor Steve Bullock vetoed HB 132 that would have changed the definition of “wild bison” in Montana. It would have disqualified essentially all possible sources of bison for use in restoring public, wild bison in the state. Thanks to all our allies who contacted the Governor, requesting the veto. And thanks to the Governor for retaining the opportunity for Montanans to once again enjoy and use wild bison as a public trust resource.

Saturday 6 April 2019

Montana HB132 threatens future of wild bison. Request Governor’s veto.

Montana HB132 threatens future of wild bison. Request Governor’s veto.
The Montana legislature, largely on party-line votes, has passed a stealth attack on any future that public, wild bison may have in our state. Ostensibly to simply redefine “wild bison” in Montana law, the bill would disqualify most, perhaps all, possible sources of bison for transplanting within or into Montana.
The following are excerpts from Doug Coffman, Supporter of our Coalition, in a message to Governor Bullock:
HB132 has not been promoted to solve any problem, nor has legislative testimony described any purpose for HB132. Apparently, HB132 has no purpose but to obstruct or preclude any attempt to reestablish wild bison in Montana. HB132 has no basis in biology: previous ownership of bison, or payment of the livestock tax, in no way preclude bison from becoming reestablished as wildlife. In my opinion, therefore, HB132 is nothing more than a hastily-drawn, politically-transparent ploy to block the biological future of one of this country’s most important charismatic wild animals.”
Despite polls showing that 70% of Montana voters support restoration of public, wild bison on some of our public lands – and especially on the Charles M. Russell National Wildlife Refuge – there are currently no wild bison year-round in Montana, nor have there been for nearly 140 years. Although bison once were a ‘lynchpin’ of the mixed-grass prairie ecosystem over all of central and eastern Montana, this keystone of the prairies survives today only by virtue of the care and hard work of countless people a century ago.”
Early in the 20th century, as the extinction of American bison appeared imminent, men such as William T. Hornaday and then-president Theodore Roosevelt formed the American Bison Society – whose sole mission was to bring back bison from the brink, and to establish a series of federal bison reserves across the western USA. Thanks to legislative success of ABS, and to substantial public and state funding, the wild gene pool was saved. It is regrettable, but despite the financial generosity of many western states in support of this mission of ABS in 1905, funding from the great state of Montana was zero. Perhaps it is time for Montana to make amends for this historic lack of will.”
Montana is perhaps the only state with sufficient native prairie where true recovery of wild bison can still occur. But HB132 is one more roadblock to recovery, at least in its intent. Given the critical need to maintain and increase the wild gene pool of plains bison in order to secure its survival, it would be most unfortunate if we allowed the return of this species to be thwarted by legislation having no basis in biological reality.”
I believe that Montana should now begin to atone for its historic lapse in behalf of preserving American bison – our national mammal – and prevent political sabotage of its future as wildlife. I urge you, Governor Bullock, to veto HB132.”
Doug Coffman is author of Reflecting the Sublime: The Rebirth of an American Icon, describing the history of the “Hornaday bison group”, specimens displayed in the Smithsonian Museum during 1888-1957 and now at the Fort Benton Museum. (2013, available from riverplains@mtintouch.net).
The Montana Wild Bison Coalition requests additional lobbying of Governor Bullock to veto HB132. Send your message to governor@mt.gov, or call (406) 444-3111.


Saturday 9 February 2019



February 8, 2019
Urgent – HB132 would prevent any restoration of wild bison

3rd and final reading before the House will be Monday, Feb. 11th
Please contact your legislators to OPPOSE HB 132

Find your Legislator  or call the Capitol Switchboard before Monday to leave a message 406-444-4800

Montana House Bill 132 would redefine public, wild bison. In effect, this seemingly innocent bill would prevent Montana from reestablishing wild bison, forever confirming the extirpation of wild bison in our state.
HB was heard in the House Agriculture committee, not the Fish, Wildlife & Parks committee. If it passes the Montana House on the 11th, it will be sent to the Senate for further deliberation.
HB132 modifies the definition of wild bison, adding that wild bison are animals that have never been in captivity. It applies to all public bison, including any that may be hunted as big game.
Currently, there are no wild bison in Montana. Inadequate and unacceptable restoration might occur if some brucellosis infected Yellowstone bison decide to stay out of the Park in the small area where they are now allowed. Any other restoration, such as on the Charles M. Russell National Wildlife Refuge, will require obtaining Brucella-free animals from a source population.
HB132 would disqualify virtually all bison from being a source for restoring public, wild bison in Montana. Yellowstone bison would have to endure captive quarantine before captive-transport to a new site. Almost all other bison are now in captivity. Free-roaming bison in Utah would have to be captured for expensive captive-transport to Montana.
HB132 has no basis in biology. It has no purpose other than the permanent extirpation of public, wild bison in Montana.
Seventy percent of Montana voters support restoration of public, wild bison in Montana. We urge them to stand against HB132 – in the Montana Senate, or if necessary, by requesting a veto by Governor Bullock.


Monday 28 January 2019

MWB Coordinator attends Living With Wildlife conference





Coalition coordinator, Jim Bailey attended the Living with Wildlife conference in Lewistown, Montana, January 24-25. The conference was sponsored by several organizations, particularly American Prairie Reserve and National Geographic
 
Plenary sessions included: Conflict Reduction Practices; Economics of Living with Wildlife; Building Community Partnerships; and Case Studies of Rancher, Agency and NGO Cooperative Projects. Dr. Bailey also attended special sessions on: Living with Wild Ungulates and on Technology for Mitigating Ranch/wildlife Conflicts. Session moderators and the audience represented a variety of non-government organizations, Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks, and ranchers. Speakers described experiences in Montana, in other states, and in Mexico and Africa. 
 
Outside of formal sessions, Dr. Bailey found abundant time to “network” and inform various participants, including journalists, of the Montana Wild Bison Restoration Coalition, its two goals and this website. His attendance was supported, in part, by a grant from the Dallas Safari Club Foundation.

Monday 7 January 2019

Dallas Safari Club Supports Bison Coalition




Dallas Safari Club Foundation 
has provided funding to support the Montana Wild Bison Restoration Coalition. Funds will be used toward the Coalition’s first goal: to disseminate information around Montana on issues and opportunities for restoring public, wild bison on and near the Charles M. Russell National Wildlife Refuge. 

Since 1972, Dallas Safari Club has been active in the conservation of wildlife and wilderness, education, and protecting the rights and interests of hunters. The Montana Wild Bison Restoration Coalition is pleased to be collaborating with them in achieving mutual goals for public, wild bison in Montana.