| WEST
YELLOWSTONE, Montana (ENS) - Early this morning,
two horse trailers driven by the Montana Department
of Livestock (DOL) carried eight of America's last wild
genetically pure buffalo to a slaughterhouse, while
three yearlings were taken to a quarantine facility,
and three others were released at Horse Butte, according
to a U.S. Forest Service law enforcement agent.
Department of Livestock spokesperson Karen Cooper delayed
releasing the information from her department.
Buffalo Field Campaign (BFC) field volunteers documented
agents who shot and killed an injured, pregnant lead
buffalo that had been holding her own for nearly a month,
during a hazing operation on Horse Butte today. Her
body was dragged behind an agent riding a snowmobile
to a flatbed truck where she was then dropped at the
local dump to be incinerated like trash.
Late Easter Sunday, under the cover of darkness, Department
of Livestock agents captured 14 wild buffalo that had
been attempting to migrate towards the Horse Butte peninsula,
national forest land surrounded by water and devoid
of active grazing allotments.
The livestock agents made only a single effort to haze
the buffalo back into Yellowstone National Park. Buffalo
are migratory animals and after being chased back into
the Park, they resumed their migration along the Duck
Creek drainage.
For the past three weeks DOL agents have been disrupting
the migration of wild buffalo by baiting them out of
Yellowstone National Park with fresh hay into a buffalo
trap they operate on private land only a few hundred
yards from the park border.
Last week the DOL baited and captured six bull buffalo
- that pose zero risk of transmitting brucellosis -
and sent half to slaughter. The actions of the past
two weeks portend a bleak future for the hundreds of
buffalo that will attempt to reach their calving grounds
at Horse Butte in the coming months.
Inhumane Treatment
BFC volunteers witnessed the livestock agents jabbing
the buffalo in the trap with long sticks, poking them
with electric cattle prods, and turning around to laugh
at BFC volunteers documenting the treatment of the buffalo.
Livestock agents routinely use electric cattle prods
and sticks, chase the buffalo with Bobcat tractors inside
the trap, hoot, holler and taunt the frightened buffalo
while walking above them; all typical behavior.
The Interagency Bison Management Plan explicitly lists
various standards of humane treatment that the agents
are recommended to follow, but they don't. The techniques
of the Department of Livestock agents indicate a blatant
disregard for the wellbeing of the buffalo.
The livestock agents are ruthless and inhumane. They
harbor no compassion and have no place handling America's
last wild buffalo. If they treated cattle this way,
they'd be out of a job.
Inaccurate Testing
The test the government uses to determine whether a
buffalo may have brucellosis or not is inaccurate because
it merely determines if the animal has been exposed
to the disease. Buffalo have developed immunities to
the European livestock disease brucellosis and retain
long-term antibodies. Only two to 20 percent of Yellowstone
buffalo actually carry any brucellosis bacteria.
There has never been a documented case of wild buffalo
transmitting brucellosis to domestic cattle.
"The livestock agency purposefully misrepresents
the wild buffalo in Yellowstone as diseased animals
even in the face of overwhelming evidence that most
of the buffalo are not infected with brucellosis and
the risk of transmission is extremely low. This is nothing
more than a policy of deception to mask a centuries-old
range war," said Josh Osher of the Buffalo Field
Campaign.
Dr. Paul Nicoletti, DVM from the University of Florida,
and a leading expert on brucellosis stated, "Bison
bulls, calves, yearlings, and non-pregnant cows pose
no measurable risk of bacteria transmission. The risk
is further reduced by spatial and temporal separation
of cattle and bison; for example, cows are not present
on the west side of the park between October and June."
Solutions
Dr. Nicoletti added, "Potential solutions that
should be considered include the mandatory vaccination
of domestic livestock, closure of specific cattle grazing
allotments, removal of cattle from private land through
acquisition or easement, spatial and temporal separation
of cattle and bison, phasing out elk feed grounds, and
the restoration of more natural winter conditions in
Yellowstone National Park."
Buffalo Field Campaign is the only group working in
the field, everyday, to stop the slaughter of the wild
Yellowstone buffalo. Volunteers defend the buffalo on
their native habitat and advocate for their protection.
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