| WEST
YELLOWSTONE, MONTANA. This morning on
the Horse Butte Peninsula, BFC volunteers documented
a Montana bison tag holder illegally shooting a bull
bison on private property where hunting is prohibited.
The hunter shot the bull less than 150 yards from two
nearby residences, which may be prohibited under Montana
regulations.
The hunter attempted to access one of three bull bison
from the Munz property, adjacent to Yellowstone Village
& Estates. The hunter said he had received
permission the night before to shoot a buffalo on the
Munz property. Three shots were fired while the bulls
and the hunter were on the Munz property. The fourth
shot was taken after the bull had entered Cook's Meadow,
an area where it is illegal to hunt or trespass.
Buffalo Field Campaign video footage clearly documented
that the hunter had taken illegal actions.
Residents of the West Yellowstone housing area have
spoken with numerous hunters, informing them that hunting
is strictly prohibited in their community. Residents
have posted numerous "no hunting" and "buffalo
safe zone" signs throughout the neighborhood.
"We've made it well-known that it's illegal to
shoot bison in this neighborhood," said Ed Millspaugh,
President of the Yellowstone Estates Homeowners Association.
"I want this hunter prosecuted to the full extent
of the law."
Fewer than three bison are outside of Yellowstone's
western boundary, wintering within a West Yellowstone
housing area where they are welcome by residents.
During the most recently completed phase of the West
Yellowstone bison hunt, which ended on the 16th of January,
the lack of bison in Montana resulted in 24 out of 25
hunters being unable to fill their tags.
"Hunters are being had by the State," said
BFC's Stephany Seay. "Montana has issued
permits to kill wild animals that aren't even here.
The hunting community should direct their frustration
toward Governor Schweitzer and FWP, and demand year-round
habitat for wild bison in Montana."
Wild bison are native to Montana yet ecologically extinct
everywhere outside of Yellowstone National Park.
Montana provides no year-round habitat for bison.
Bison management currently falls under authority of
the Montana Department of Livestock, who, with state
and federal assistance, manages them as a nuisance animal.
Once hunting season ends, wild bison will be subjected
to harassment, capture, slaughter or quarantine.
There is never a time when wild bison are allowed in
the state without being molested.
Buffalo Field Campaign opposes Montana's bison hunt.
BFC maintains that habitat should come prior to a hunt
and calls on the state of Montana to provide year-round
habitat for wild bison and allow bison to restore a
viable population on public lands in Montana.
American Bison once spanned the continent, numbering
between 30 and 50 million. The Yellowstone bison are
America's only continuously wild, genetically unique
herd, numbering fewer than 4,000 animals, less than
.01 percent of the bison's former population.
1,871 bison have been killed since 2000 under the Interagency
Bison Management Plan. Last winter Federal and
State agencies killed or authorized the killing of more
than 1,010 bison. So far this winter two bison
were captured and sent to slaughter by Montana Department
of Livestock agents and hunters have killed 27.
Buffalo Field Campaign (BFC) is the only group working
in the field, every day, to stop the slaughter of the
wild Yellowstone buffalo. Volunteers defend the
buffalo and their native habitat and advocate for their
lasting protection. For more information, video
clips and photos visit: http://www.buffalofieldcampaign.org
Top
of Page
|