To Save the Wild Bison: Life on the Edge in Yellowstone

Front Cover
University of Oklahoma Press, 2005 - Nature - 328 pages

Although the American bison was saved from near-extinction in the nineteenth century, today almost all herds are managed like livestock. The Yellowstone area is the only place in the United States where wild bison have been present since before the first Euro-Americans arrived. But these bison pose risks to property and people when they roam outside the park, including the possibility that they can spread the abortion-inducing disease brucellosis to cattle. Yet measures to constrain the population threaten their status as wild animals.

Mary Ann Franke’s To Save the Wild Bison is the first book to examine the ecological and political aspects of the bison controversy and how it reflects changing attitudes toward wildlife. The debate has evoked strong emotions from all sides, including park officials, environmentalists, livestock growers, and American Indians. In describing political compromises among competing positions, Franke does not so much champion a cause as critique the process by which federal and state officials have made and carried out bison management policies. She shows that science, however valuable a tool, cannot by itself resolve what is ultimately a choice among conflicting values.

 

Contents

Coming to America
5
A Removable Resource
11
A Park Is Born
20
Not Just Another Buffalo
41
For the Great National Playground
49
Under More Natural Conditions
75
The Imbalance of Nature
100
Outward Bound
129
Confronting People and Predators
193
Winter Range for Snowmobiles
204
Hunted Again
219
Indians at the Crossroads
235
A New Buffalo Nation
254
Thinking Outside the Box
270
Notes
279
Selected References
309

A Disagreeable Agreement
147
The High Cost of Free Roaming
162

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About the author (2005)

Mary Ann Franke, a writer drawn to the intersection of nature and culture, has worked in Yellowstone National Park for nine summers. Author of Yellowstone in the Afterglow: Lessons from the Fires (2000), she migrates seasonally to Sedona, Arizona.

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