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Wednesday, May 25, 2016

Creature Feature: Bison

Bison are big. I mean, big news. Since 1782, the United States has called the bald eagle it's national bird. Its sharp beak and keen eyes can be seen on everything from the President's seal to post office trucks (even though I always thought it was just a letter traveling at light speed). Now, in 2016, the bison has been adopted as the national mammal. 

Cool Facts About Bison

  • Males are called "bulls", and females are called "cows". Bulls can weigh over 2,000 pounds, making them the largest land mammals in North America. 
  • The direct ancestor of the modern-day bison lived 400,000 years ago, and had horns like measured 9 feet from tip to tip! (Today's bison horns are 2 feet.)
  • "Bison bison" is their scientific name, and "bison" is the correct common name. The term "buffalo", however, is widely used and accepted. 
  • You can tell their mood by their tails. When their tails are raised straight up, it indicated their intention to charge. 
  • There are two variants: the wood bison and the plains bison. 
  • They can run up to 40 miles per hour and jump 6 feet!
  • Just like us humans, they can be 6 feet tall, and they have a 9-month pregnancy. But unlike us, their babies weigh 30 pounds. 
  • Bison help the soil. They graze on grass, turning up the soil with their hooves and fertlizing it with their feces. This gave farmers fertile land, once agriculture arrived to the Great Plains. 
  • Bison also help other animals. They are food for wolves, and many scavengers eat their massive carcasses. Prairie dogs also prefer to live in areas where bison graze in order to see predators easier in the short grass.


Their Roots Run Deep
Native Americans have lived with the bison for many decades. In ceremonial bison drives, they would run a whole herd over a cliff to their deaths. This large hunt provided necessary supplies for harsh winters. Sometimes, hunters surrounded a herd, tightly packing them together and allowing archers a better shot. When Europeans came in the 1500's with horses, some Native Americans became nomadic, following bison herds on horseback. Native Americans were not a problem for the bison population. Although they hunted many, large herds could sustain themselves, and the tribes were frugal, using everything from the animals. They ate the bison meat, used the skin for clothing, and made tools from their bones and horns. Bison also served as a spiritual animal for the tribes that prospered from them. 

Genocide on the Great Plains
In the late 1800's, the expansion of the railroad into the Great Plains promoted the slaughter of the bison in more ways than one. Killing bison meant to clear the way for railroad tracks, and also to feed workers laying them. Commercial hunters shipped 1.5 million carcasses east to be sold for their meat and hides. In fact, that's how William Cody got the iconic nickname "Buffalo Bill"- he massacred 4,000 in just 2 years. In the 1870's, the elastic leather drive belts used in mills, which was made from bison hides, was in great demand. Because they were seen as pests, bison were shot for entertainment- some trains allowed passengers to shoot from their windows. There were even bison-killing contests. On a more cynical note, the slaughter was a means of easily moving Native Americans to reservations, as the loss of this beautiful animal disheartened many tribes. An estimated 30 to 200 million bison once roamed the plains from Mexico up to Canada, from the Rocky Mountains to the Mississippi River. By 1890, only 1,000 remained. 

Saving the Species
In 1894, the first federal legislation protecting these animals was enacted. Killing of bison was punishable by a $1000.00 fine or imprisonment. In 1905, the American Bison Society was founded in New York by wealthy aristrocrats, including Andrew Carnegie and Theodore Roosevelt. In 1907, they sent 15 bison from the Bronx Zoo in New York, by train, out to a reserve in Oklahoma. Today, there are approximately 500,000 bison in North America. Yellowstone National Park is home to 5,000 free-roaming bison but most bison are the property of private ranchers, raised for their meat. (55,000 bison belong to Ted Turner alone, the founder of CNN.) 

The Big Picture
I started off this blog saying bison are big. But what about even bigger things? What is in store for these animals, and many like it, in the future? There's no doubt that this attention brought to the bison will help shed light to the conservation of many American animals. When many people think about conservation, they envision habitat destruction in the Amazon rain forest, or poaching in Africa. But what this new symbol will- hopefully- promote is conservation right here at home. 

Want more info? Check out Defenders of WildlifeNational Geographicthe New Yorker, and the National Wildlife Federation. As always, thanks for reading everyone! 

"Invention is the root of innovation. Innovation is the major force for change in the future."

Hey everyone! I wanted to talk today a little bit about some emerging technology. I know I've done a few blogs now on inventions that will help the environment, and I plan to continue featuring more as they come to fruition. "But this is a wildlife blog, this doesn't have to do with wildlife!", actually, it does. Any new way that we humans can reduce our harmful effects on the environment helps wildlife around the world. 

A Chinese company is working on a straddling bus that would allow cars to drive underneath it. With the possibility of moving 1,400 passengers, this type of transportation would take that many cars off the road, severely reducing air pollution. Not to mention how many traditional buses it would replace, and how much fuel it would save. As an added bonus, it looks like a giant monster swallowing cars. Check out the nifty video below:

A huge problem for wildlife is when people don't cut those plastic bottle rings that come with 6-packs of whatever-you-drink. The rings can constrict an animal, and oftentimes these animals will suffer with severe deformities and pain until dying a slow death of either suffocation or internal damage. Even if you do cut those rings, birds and turtles still eat the plastic. Now, there are biodegradable bottle rings! Unlike the plastic ones, these can be flung wherever without causing any damage to wildlife! They are made from wheat and barley, which means they are completely edible and degrade much much faster than traditional plastic ones (which may last 90 days). Since wheat and barley are by-products of beer production, it's also a form of recycling matter that's usually discarded. I'm super excited for this invention to become a part of our daily lives! I've included another video for you here: 


These inventions, along with many others in the works, will help us all to be better environmental stewards. So let's have more of that and less of this. Thanks for reading everyone!