buck59

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 21, 2003
Messages
227
Reaction score
0
I think this is headed for a political disaster. This is only the start of he said she said I told you so. WATCH OUT!!


posted 2/15/04

Elk grounds linked to disease
By BECKY BOHRER
Associated Press

WEST YELLOWSTONE - In Montana, the thought of allowing bison that can carry brucellosis near cattle prompts calls for action, often lethal: Bison entering the state from Yellowstone National Park can be shipped to slaughter.

But in neighboring Wyoming, where elk are suspected of spreading the same disease to cattle, there is virtually no call for such a deadly action to elk, many of which feast in winter on feedgrounds that critics say help perpetuate the disease problem.

While bison and elk both carry the disease, the animals are seen - and dealt with - in very different ways by wildlife managers and others who all have the common goal of eradicating brucellosis from the greater Yellowstone area within years.


They're managed differently in part because of biological differences, particularly in habits while birthing, when there is risk of spreading brucellosis to other animals.

But there are other factors as well - place, politics, public sentiment - that weigh heavily on management decisions.

"If this were easy, we'd have had it resolved long ago," Yellowstone National Park wildlife biologist Rick Wallen said.

Instead, state and federal agencies are working under specific plans for wildlife management designed for their own jurisdictions and for their particular circumstances.

In Montana, bison that leave Yellowstone and can't be herded back are captured and tested for brucellosis under a joint state-federal plan. The idea is to minimize the chances of transmitting the disease to cattle, which can cause them to abort. Bison testing positive for brucellosis are sent to slaughter.

When it comes to elk in Montana, brucellosis hasn't proven much of a problem, said Keith Aune, research chief for the Department of Fish, Wildlife and Parks. He credits that to managing elk for a target population over the landscape and not artificially concentrating them through use of such things as feedgrounds.

However, in Wyoming, elk are a bigger concern for wildlife and livestock managers. Elk are suspected of spreading brucellosis to cattle there, resulting in trade sanctions by other states and jeopardizing Wyoming's brucellosis-free status.

A major issue is the feedgrounds. To help keep the animals away from farmers' haystacks and cattle in winter, feedgrounds are set out in areas - from the National Elk Refuge near Jackson to nearly two dozen others that are state-run and state-funded in the western part of Wyoming.

Some experts and critics say the feedgrounds help promote the disease's spread among the gathered elk. The brucellosis prevalence rate among feedground elk in Wyoming, officials say, is far higher than it is among elk in Montana.

Tom Thorne, a wildlife disease consultant for the Wyoming Game and Fish Department, said there would probably be only a "minor brucellosis problem" if there weren't feedgrounds.

However, "feedgrounds are probably the best tool Wyoming has for confronting brucellosis in elk because they keep elk from cattle and give us an opportunity to vaccinate elk," he said.

But so far, officials say, there haven't been loud calls for getting rid of the feedgrounds and there are no immediate plans to do so.

Feedgrounds help give wildlife managers access to elk for vaccination for brucellosis. Some hunters say they also help ensure good elk numbers.

"It's a two-edge sword," Wyoming state veterinarian Jim Logan said.

Wyoming's elk-management plan includes giving some of the animals a brucellosis vaccine that Thorne said was once preferred for cattle. Its effectiveness in elk is not very high, though.

"We don't have a good vaccine," Logan said. "But it is a tool."

On the National Elk Refuge, where about 700 bison and 6,500 elk feed in winter, efforts are made to spread the animals out as much as possible, refuge biologist Bruce Smith said. He noted that those efforts have been effective in cutting the rate of brucellosis among elk. The refuge and Grand Teton National Park also are looking at wildlife management options, he said.

But some conservationists question whether the agencies are making any headway at all in moving toward their goal of eradicating brucellosis from the greater Yellowstone area by 2010.

D.J. Schubert, a wildlife biologist with the Fund for Animals, said not recognizing feedgrounds in Wyoming as a major problem is "laughable."

Ted Fellman, a spokesman for the Buffalo Field Campaign, an activist group that tries to protect bison from Montana's slaughter program, said it's ridiculous to think brucellosis can be wiped out.

He said the focus should be on better managing cattle. Bison defenders say there has not been a documented case of bison transmitting brucellosis to cattle in the wild.

"They're going to be wasting tax dollars for decades," he said of the agencies, "and they're going to be a failure."

Schubert added, "In my opinion, there is not a bright future for Yellowstone wildlife right now. I think we will see a lot of dead animals, litigation and legislation."

Tom Toman, director of conservation at the Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation, said mention of a state losing its brucellosis-free status for cattle makes the issue political.

"If someone wasn't worried about it jumping across to livestock, it probably wouldn't be an issue at all," he said.

Brucellosis is a big issue for Boulder, Wyo.-area rancher Joel Bousman, whose neighbor had cattle that were destroyed because brucellosis was found. Bousman's own cattle are under quarantine.

Bousman, who said he suspects elk of being responsible for the infection, said he'd like to see a stronger response to elk, perhaps some kind of test-and-slaughter program.

Gregg Arthur, Wyoming's deputy Game and Fish Department director, said that's been proposed and rejected before. Not only was it deemed nearly impossible from a logistical standpoint, but it also was seen as socially and politically unacceptable, he said.

However, he noted that Wyoming Gov. Dave Freudenthal plans to name a task force to "look at all we've been doing to see if we should be doing something differently."

As far as bison, Montana state veterinarian Tom Linfield said he sees no immediate changes in the management strategy, despite sharp criticism the plan continues to draw from conservationists.

Many state and federal officials involved in the issue say that given their agencies' mandates and local pressures, eradicating brucellosis any time soon is probably unlikely.

"Until there are other management plans with a high level of success in reducing transmission, it is probably not time to commit to eradication in the bison population at Yellowstone National Park," said Wallen, Yellowstone's wildlife biologist.

Jim Knight, a wildlife specialist with Montana State University in Bozeman, believes agencies "keep implementing things that seem like delaying tactics."

"This is probably one of the few wildlife issues I've come across that is solvable," Knight said. "But for political and social reasons, we're not solving it."
 

threeforks

Member
Joined
Oct 4, 2003
Messages
21
Reaction score
0
Just my
<
on this one. Here in Wyoming I see the feed grounds as a good way of keeping the elk and cattle seperated. The cows in boulder were about ten miles from a feed ground. The elk stay in the feed grounds durring the winter, except for when the wolves chase them out. But they still stay in their heards and up away from the cattle down lower. I have nothing against the ranchers. My dad has cattle, but he does not open range them. I think the most likely chance for the elk and cattle to come in contact of each other is in the summer when some ranchers run their cattle up in the national forest, and wilderness where the elk are. I know the state will not change the grazing leases for the ranchers, but that is where I would look for an answer. Threeforks.....
 

Modocer

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 19, 2001
Messages
700
Reaction score
9
Brucellosis causes ungluates (cattle, elk, bison) to abort their fetuses. The disease is then spread from one species to another when one animal comes in to contact with the aborted fetus. From this initial contact, the disease is then transfered to the animal and that animal spreads the disease to others as a verereal disease. When the herd of cattle is infected, national and state agriculture laws state that the herd be quarantined. All the cows are then blood tested and the infected cattle are then shipped to slaughter (because this is a venereal disease there is no contamination of the meat and it is safe for human consumption) in a sealed truck. This means that the loading door of the truck is taped up with what looks like a bumper sticker explaining that the truck contains brucellosis infected cattle. Only a state veternarian is allowed to break the seal and open the door at the slaughter house. This is done to ensure that the cattle aren't unloaded at any point, thus further spreading the disease.

The last outbreak of brucellosis in California took 40 years to contain. During that time, our herd became infected twice - and we are a closed herd. The second infection took 7-8 years of blood testing the cattle twice a year to clear up the contamination. The disease cost us about 1-2% of the herd each test. Our neighbor was so heavily infected, the state required him to erradicate his herd, thus causing him to go bankrupt. California law requires that each female cow that could possibly be kept for breeding purposes, be vaccinated and tattooed for Brucellosis before they are shipped or sold. This vaccination is called the Bangs vaccination. Speyed heifers are exempt from the vaccination. Only state certified veternarians can administer the vaccine and tattoo the animals. Cattle entering the state of California, are required to be Bangs vaccinated also.

The Yellowstone bison/elk herds are the last source of infection for brusellosis in North America. The cattle industry has effectively eliminated the disease through extensive testing, and erradication requirements. The National Park Service and the federal wildlife managers are unwilling to work with the other ag agencies (federal and local) to protect the uninfected animals (bison/elk) from becoming infected, and to eliminate the infected animals from the herds. The only way to eliminate the disease would be to blood test each animal, and to put down any animal that comes back positive for the disease. This would not be that difficult due to the relatively small size of the herds - 2-3 days would be enough time for the testing.
 

ranchwife

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 9, 2001
Messages
1,809
Reaction score
36
It absolutely amazes me what a cattle rancher has to do to protect his/her herd from various diseases, yet government agencies aren't required to do anything to protect the wildlife that can become infected with the same diseases. This leads to the cattle rancher being blamed for hurting wildlife, when actually it is the other way around. If the state of California (with all of it's screwed up ways of thinking and acting) can get rid of the disease in the entire state, why can't a small area like Yellowstone (which is 2,221,773 acres - an area smaller than Modoc county) get rid of the same problem. I guess they care more about the animal rights people and environmentalists than they do about the animals and resources they are entrusted to protect.
 
Top Bottom