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WEST
YELLOWSTONE & GARDINER, MONTANA - Today
marks the opening day for Montana's bison hunt, authorized
by the Montana Department of Livestock. Montana has
issued 44 tags to kill members of America's last wild
bison population that migrate out of Yellowstone National
Park into Montana. It is expected that the Nez
Perce as well as Confederated Salish-Kootenai Tribes
will conduct separate buffalo hunts under treaty right.
The state's hunt will continue through February 15,
2008.
There are currently no wild bison in Montana.
Glenn Hockett, President of the Gallatin Wildlife Association,
a hunting organization that opposes the current bison
hunt and is working to help restore wild bison in Montana
had this to say, "Recent reports from Yellowstone
National Park indicate there are no bison in the state
of Montana for hunters to hunt. I think this points
out the flawed nature of this shoot 'em at the border
Department of Livestock led "hunt" with no
year round habitat."
Wild American bison, while native to vast expanses of
North America, are granted no year-round habitat in
Montana. There is never a time that wild bison are allowed
to be in the state without being subjected to harassment,
capture, slaughter, quarantine, or shooting. Wild bison
are ecologically extinct everywhere outside of Yellowstone
National Park.
Montana's bison hunt is not authorized by the state's
wildlife agency Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks,
but by the Montana Department of Livestock, an agency
that promotes cattle interests.
"I don't think most people understand that only
the Department of Livestock can authorize the hunting
of wild bison in Montana, and their goal is no bison
left standing in Montana," said Glenn Hockett.
"Allowing the Department of Livestock to have authority
over the management of wild bison or any wildlife species
is a clear conflict of interest," said Buffalo
Field Campaign spokeswoman Stephany Seay. "They
have no interest whatsoever in wild bison or their habitat,
and you may as well put the fox in charge of guarding
the hen house."
Fewer than 4,700 continuously wild American bison exist
in the United States; all reside in Yellowstone National
Park. A joint state-federal agreement signed in 2000,
the Interagency Bison Management Plan prohibits wild
bison from migrating to lands outside of the Park and
maintains a zero population of wild bison in Montana
in an effort to benefit cattle interests who claim they
fear the spread of the livestock disease brucellosis
from wild bison to cattle. There has never been
a documented case of wild bison transmitting brucellosis
to cattle.
Buffalo Field Campaign strongly opposes Montana's bison
hunt as well as the Interagency Bison Management Plan.
BFC maintains that wild bison should be allowed to naturally
and fully restore themselves throughout their native
range, especially on public lands, and must be managed
as a valued native wildlife species by wildlife professionals,
not cattle interests.
"Our position on the hunt is clear," said
Buffalo Field Campaign's cofounder and subsistence hunter
Mike Mease, "No habitat, No hunt."
2,018 wild American bison have been killed or otherwise
removed from the remaining wild population in Yellowstone
since 2000 under actions carried out by the Interagency
Bison Management Plan, as well as state and treaty right
hunts.
Buffalo Field Campaign 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. Buffalo Field Campaign has proposed real
alternatives to the current mismanagement of Yellowstone
bison that can be viewed at
http://www.buffalofieldcampaign.org/actnow/solutions05.html.
For more information, video clips and photos visit:
http://www.buffalofieldcampaign.org.
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