Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2009/02/04
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]I have received several e-mails doubting my assertion that most of the Western bison are descended from bison from the Bronx, NY. Here is the story: William T. Hornaday, the first director of the Bronx Zoo, had a deep interest in the American bison and chose to make them the first conservation success story in the New York Zoological Society's history. Once numbering 50 million in North America, bison had been decimated by hunting and westward expansion. In October 1899, Hornaday acquired bison for the Bronx Zoo and began to build the zoo herd. In 1905, with fewer than 1,000 American bison left in the wild, the NY Zoological Society sponsored the founding of the American Bison Society at the Bronx Zoo. With Hornaday as the bison groups president, the organization was instrumental in securing national protection for the bison and rangeland for the establishment of new herds. In 1907, 15 of the Bronx Zoo bison were shipped to Oklahomas Wichita Mountain Preserve. Subsequently, bison were provided for other refuges in Montana, South Dakota, and Nebraska. Gradually, the western herds grew and the bison population rebounded. Most of todays bison in the western U.S. are descendents of those Bronx Zoo animals shipped at the turn of the 20th century. By the way, the cross between the American Bison (Buffalo) and the domestic cow is called the Beefalo, and is both lean and tasty. How about a photo essay on the Beefalo in the snow? Larry Z