By Bill Schneider, 10-27-05
While writing several articles about the contentious bison hunt, one little fact has been sticking in my throat like one of those Y-shaped bones you find in pike fillets. (And those “little facts� are like “little problems;� they’re rarely little.)lsBill
Both you and Keith Aune have some serious misconceptions about brucellosis and the disease as it exists in elk and bison and the alleged threat to cattle. There is no "elk problem." There is however a huge "cattle" problem. Let me explain.
Brucellosis is not a biological problem either for elk or bison. The disease, which was brought to the Greater Yellowstone by cattle over a century ago, is now endemic in the elk and bison populations of the Greater Yellowstone and is as entrenched in the ecosystem as is cheat grass. It is not going away; it cannot be eradicated and will not be eradicated, no matter what the agencies and the livestock industry claim. The disease, which causes spontaneous abortions in female ungulates, simply has had no effect on the population growth of either species as we well know. In western Wyoming, many of the elk herds are as much as 30% over objective. It is not fatal. It can be managed by maintaining strict separation between cattle and wildlife. And the best way to do that is to eliminate cows from the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem. Rather than wildlife being a threat to cattle, it's cows that are the threat to wildlife. We need to get out priorities straight.
Brucellosis is strictly a cattle problem, not because it is fatal, but because it affects production, which affects marketing. It is an economic disease for the livestock industry that has largely been managed through the implementation of various controls and restrictions on the industry. We have to ask ourselves, why are we sacrificing priceless wildlife populations for a few cows in the Greater Yellowstone?
The cases in Wyoming where brucellosis was passed to cattle from elk have been grossly misprepresented by the livestock industry and the agencies. In the case in which there has been some information released, the infection of a cattle herd near Muddy Feedground east of Pinedale, is instructive. The Feedground, which sits on National Forest land, could not be used because the Forest Service requires the Wyoming Game & Fish Department to "serve" the certified-free hay. Due to the Department's incompetence, it could only buy uncertified hay. Therefore, it could not feed elk on the feedground. So the Department talked the local landowner, Doc Jensen, into allowing elk to be fed on his private property. That occured in proximity to his cattle. Consequently, his herd was infected. Quite frankly, there was a quite a bit of negligence on his and the Department's parts.
We need to understand that free-ranging elk that have full access to their habitat and are not fed have low rates of brucellosis and the risk of infecting cattle is extremely low, and could be accomplished, for example, by fencing in cattle feedlines. The cost of managing that risk, however, should be borne by the livestock industry.
The second brucellosis outbreak in Wyoming was also traced to Jensen's herd. The third outbreak, in Teton County, has had no information released to the public, no doubt to hide the fact of similar negligence on the part of the landowner and the Department.
Yes, feedgrounds are a serious problem for Wyoming and Montana's wildlife, but not because of brucellosis, whiuch is truly a nonproblem, but because of the risk of truly fatal diseases such as chronic wasting disease, which is moving toward the feedgrounds. When the disease hits the feedgrounds, there will be an epidemic. See my little piece, Elk A Science Fiction Story, here on NewWest where I talk about the consequences of an epidemic speculatively.
We need to understand that the feedgrounds in Wyoming exist only because the livestock industry and individual ranchers demand them. They demand them to protect forage on both public and private lands for cattle. In other words, the feedgrounds exist for the sole purpose of reserving forage for cattle as well as extending the control that the industry already exercises ove wildlife management.
Ask yourself this question: if brucellosis were really a problem for the livestock industry, you'd think that agricultural agencies and the industry would demand that elk not be fed and the feedgrounds be closed, since they are the sole source of continuing infection in the GYE. Yet, ranchers are the strongest proponents of the feedgrounds and have forced the Wyoming Game & Fish Dept to operate them at hunters' expense; the industry puts not one dime into running the feedgrounds. The cost is over $1.5 million per year to operate petrie dishes of disease. That should tell you that the feedgrounds exist for a purpose that benefits the industry. And that's protection of grass from elk and extending control over wildlife for the benefit of the industry. I call this the "fencing in Yellowstone" strategy, and not only is it being imposed on elk and bison, but on wolves and bears.
Thus, brucellosis is a huge fraud being imposed on the people of the Greater Yellowstone by the livestock industry to protect the land use privileges of a dying oligarchy.
I'd love to talk to you some more about this. Contact me at and we can set up a time to discuss it, if you're willing. Thanks.
Robert Hoskins
Brucellosis is a huge fraud imposed not only on the people of Greater Yellowstone, but on ALL Americans.
American citizens, through their federal tax dollars, fund the hazing, persecution, and slaughter of wild bison when, following their migratory instinct, they leave Yellowstone in winter for lower-elevation public land surrounding the park in Montana, where cattle are king.
Why does the Montana Department of Livestock (DOL) have jurisdiction over our country's treasured wildlife -- America's last genetically-pure, free-roaming wild bison? Why are bull bison who test positive for brucellosis anti-bodies slaughtered when a) testing positive for anti-bodies indicates exposure only; b) the disease is transmitted through the birthing process; and c) it has never been transmitted from bison to cattle in the wild anyhow? Fraud indeed!
I suggest that citizens see for themselves the utter injustice and ugliness being played out in Montana (and sanctioned by the National Park Service, Forest Service, and MT Fish, Wildlife & Parks) every winter and spring, when pregnant bison and mothers with newborn calves are chased relentlessly by DOL agents on snowmobiles, ATVs, even helicopters! If you can stomach it, watch the terrified creatures prodded and herded, many injured and bleeding, into capture facilities -- one of them actually inside the boundaries of the world's much-revered first national park, Yellowstone. Is this our vision for native wildlife?
Visit http://www.buffalofieldcampaign.org for video clips, or contact BFC for a DVD of footage and information documenting the treatment of wild bison in Montana. But be forewarned: it's both heart and gut-wrenching, and just might turn you into a buffalo advocate.
I stand corrected. Brucellosis is a huge fraud perpetrated on the American people.
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