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Tribes prepare way for return of wild buffalo herd

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POPLAR, Mont. – Native Americans depended on the buffalo for hundreds of years for food, clothing, tools and medicine. Now today’s tribes want to return the favor by helping preserve one of the last genetically pure herds in North America.

The Sioux and Assiniboine tribes of the Fort Peck Indian Reservation have spent hundreds of thousands of dollars preparing 5,000 rolling acres in northeastern Montana for 50 wild bison from Yellowstone National Park. Their neighbors to the west at the Fort Belknap reservation also have asked for a role in managing the bison.

The animals are part of a federal quarantine program and are in need of a home. The tribes say they are ready for them.

“The Native American probably wouldn’t have survived if it wasn’t for the buffalo,” said Robert Magnan, the head of Fort Peck’s fish and game department. “Now it’s our turn to help the buffalo instead of turning a blind eye to them.”

But they’re finding resistance from ranchers, farmers and lawmakers – and, perhaps most frustratingly, silence from the state wildlife officials now considering sites for the five years remaining in the quarantine program.

Yellowstone National Park’s estimated 3,500 bison are a rare bunch – they are the only herd never to be domesticated and the largest of only a handful of herds that have not been crossbred with cattle.

“We need to conserve their wildness as much as their genetics,” said Jonathon Proctor, regional representative for Defenders of Wildlife.

“If we were to lose the Yellowstone bison or even a part of the genetic diversity of the Yellowstone herd, we lose it forever. The way they are managed right now, there’s the threat of just that.”

Ranchers and farmers have long fought to keep wild bison from wandering out of the park due to concerns about disease and property damage. Thousands of bison have been slaughtered over the last three decades as a matter of public policy when they stray from their Yellowstone refuge, part of a slaughter program that aims to protect Montana’s cattle industry against the disease brucellosis, which can cause livestock to abort fetuses.

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