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Wood Buffalo National Park

From the mid-1930s, Wood Buffalo National Park sustained a total population of about 12,000 for four decades under a management regime that included wolf control and periodic slaughters. The number of bison started to decline when a policy of non-intervention was adopted in the 1960s. Bison are protected from hunting within the bounds of the park. They are infected with bovine tuberculosis and brucellosis. In March 1999, 2100 animals were counted in the park. A survey conducted in 2002 counted about 4000 animals.

Bison are found throughout Wood Buffalo National Park in several free-roaming herds. Distributions change and can be affected by natural occurrences. For example, spring flooding in 1998 forced bison to move out of the Peace-Athabasca delta.


Economic Use

No bison hunting is permitted within the boundaries of Wood Buffalo National Park.


Management

Bison within the park are infected with both tuberculosis and brucellosis. In 1995, a Bison Research and Containment Program (BRCP) was initiated to ensure the diseases were properly researched and contained within WBNP. In 1999, a Risk Assessment was carried out to determine the risk of infection with tuberculosis or brucellosis to cattle and disease-free captive and free-ranging bison.

To prevent the spread of these diseases to uninfected herds outside the park, a Bison Control Area was created. Any bison found within the Bison Control Area are quickly removed.

There are presently no habitat improvements or prescribed burns carried out in the park. Fires occurring within the park are allowed to burn as part of the natural cycle but are fought if they are within 10 km of the park border.

The bison population in Wood Buffalo National Park decreased dramatically in the 1970s and 1980s as a result of disease, predation and natural events. However, it remained relatively stable from 1994 through 1999. The most recent population survey in 2002 estimated the total population within the park to be 4000 bison. The reason for this dramatic increase is not known.

Year  Population Estimate 
1971  10,832 
1972  10,491 
1973  9,134 
1974  8,401 
1975  5,527 
1976  6,061 
1977  5,170 
1978  5,378 
1979 5,539 
1980 4,521 
1981 5,558 
1983 5,006
1984 4,667 
1985 4,582 
1987  4,139 
1988 4,130 
1989 3,254 
1990 3,375 
1991 3,310 
1994 2,031 
1995 2,230 
1996 2,551 
1997 2,105 
1998 2,178 
1999 2,137 
2002  4,000 

Although wood bison herds in Wood Buffalo National Park are compromised by disease, conservation efforts in other parts of Canada have achieved considerable success towards recovery of the subspecies. Wood bison salvaged from Wood Buffalo National Park in the 1960s, and their descendants, have been transplanted to establish five free-roaming herds in Canada. The possibility of establishing new free-ranging herds of wood bison looks promising.

 
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