American Bison | ||||||||||||||
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Bison bison |
The American Bison (Bison bison), sometimes incorrectly called "buffalo", is a large bovine mammal that formerly roamed the open plains of the United States and Canada in massive herds, ranging from the Great Slave Lake[?] to Mexico and from eastern Oregon almost to the Atlantic Ocean.
Bison have a shaggy, dark brown winter coat, and a lighter brown (and lighter weight) summer coat. The heads and forequarters are massive, and both sexes have short, curved horns, which they use in fighting for status within the herd. Bison mate in August and September; a single reddish-brown calf is born the following spring, and nurses for a year. Bison are mature at three years of age, and have a life expectancy of 18-22 years.
Bison were hunted almost to extinction in the 19th century; the Bronx Zoo maintained a remnant herd, from which populations were re-established in Yellowstone National Park and other wildlife preserves, beginning early in the 20th century. A variety of privately-owned herds have also been established, starting from this population. The current American Bison population is estimated at 350,000, compared to an estimated 60-100 million before Columbus.
Hunters were paid by large railroad concerns to destroy entire herds for several reasons:
Bison are now raised for meat and hides. Over 250,000 of the 350,000 remaining bison are being raised for human consumption. Bison meat is lower in fat and cholesterol than beef which has led to the development of beefalo, a fertile cross-breed of bison and domestic cattle. Recent genetic studies of privately-owned herds of bison show that many of them include animals with genes from domestic cattle; there may be as few as 15,000 pure bison in the world. The numbers are uncertain because the tests so far used mitochondrial DNA analysis, and thus would miss cattle genes inherited in the male line; some of the hybrids look exactly like purebred bison.
The bison is a symbol of Manitoba and of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police.
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