If you've ever been to Yellowstone National Park, you know that it can be the kind of experience that stays with you forever.
On Aug. 28, scientists from Washington and Lee University, the National Park Service and the University of Wyoming published research in Science magazine shedding new light on the value of bison ...
Research by Shapiro and University of Alberta professor Duane Froese, published in the “Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences,” pulls that date much closer: between 130,000 and 195,000 years ...
Yellowstone National Park has long been home to thousands of bison, the area’s most iconic animal. Almost daily, tourists stop their cars to allow streams of these massive mammals to cross the roads.
More than 250 bison were pushed back into Yellowstone National Park on Wednesday, perhaps the most bison moved in a single day by the Montana Department of Livestock. Meanwhile, eight bison captured ...
In Yellowstone National Park, bison aren't just iconic wildlife; they're quiet ecosystem engineers. Once nearly wiped out, these massive grazers are now reshaping entire landscapes in ways scientists ...
Free-moving herds of migratory bison in Yellowstone National Park are stimulating the regrowth of flourishing grasslands and reshaping ecosystems, a new study has found. Contrary to conventional ...
One might think that the National Park Service and the State of Montana, the two entities charged with stewardship of American bison, our national mammal, could do a better job. The Alliance for the ...
This story was originally published by Montana Free Press. Montana is suing Yellowstone National Park over a plan to increase the number of bison in and around the park and establish greater tolerance ...
JACKSON, Wyo. (AP) - Even in a herd of 750, Boris the bison stands out. His hair is a reddish rust color instead of the more common black or brown. His horns are wider and thicker and his head appears ...
Tens of millions of wild bison once roamed across western North America. Today, wild bison occupy less than one percent of their former range. Yet in spite of this, the National Park Service's new ...
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