ROBERT A. GARROTT
Professor Fish and Wildlife Management
Ecology Department--Montana State University
Office Phone: (406) 994-2270 FAX: (406) 994-3190 e-mail: rgarrott@montana.edu
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A demographic analysis of the Yellowstone National Park bison (Bison bison) herds from 1902 to 2000
Julie A. Fuller and Robert A. Garrott
The Yellowstone
National Park (YNP) bison population is increasingly the subject of public and
political attention. Bison are considered by many to be "charismatic
megafauna", and are popular tourist attractions to YNP. However, bison
harbor the disease brucellosis (Brucella abortus), which is of concern to
livestock-producing states around YNP. In recent years, bison have been leaving
YNP boundaries in winter more frequently than they did historically (NPS 2000),
with some animals spending part of winter on U.S. Forest Service grazing
allotments or on private lands. This behavior worries cattle producers, and has
led to considerable debate about why bison are leaving the park now more than in
the past. There is conjecture that bison leave YNP more frequently due to the
ease of travel on groomed and packed of trails maintained for snowmachines
during winter time. Alternately, bison may be leaving YNP simply to extend their
range as a response to their increasing population.
The objective of this
project is to thoroughly analyze the population demography of the YNP bison
herds using more than 100 years of count and removal information (1902-present)
and 34 years of herd composition surveys (1970-present); one of the largest,
long-term data sets for a large herbivore population. The YNP bison population
will provide an excellent natural experiment in effects of density on a
population: they have been subject to periods of encouraged growth, unrestrained
growth, and they have been managed around set population levels. Bison
experience negligible predation, thus are regulated through density-dependent
factors, weather effects, and human removals. An examination of bison population
trends and demographic structure in relation to density-dependent and
density-independent factors may help clarify the extent to which bison leave the
park due to density-dependent pressures or due to the presence of low-energy
travel routes, such as the groomed roads for snow machines in the winter time.
Funding: National Park Service