Printer Friendly
The Free Library
14,380,430 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

BUFFALO RANCHER FINDS HERD FARES WELL AGAINST BEARS.


Byline: Dean Fosdick Associated Press Associated Press: see news agency.
Associated Press (AP)

Cooperative news agency, the oldest and largest in the U.S. and long the largest in the world.
 

Bill Burton is a buffalo rancher, but he didn't get into it on a cholesterol-correct marketing whim. He started raising the shaggy-shouldered critters after hundreds of his cattle became bear bait on this wild corner of Kodiak Island Kodiak Island (kō`dēăk'), 5,363 sq mi (13,890 sq km), c.100 mi (160 km) long and 10–60 mi (16–96 km) wide, off S Alaska, separated from the Alaska Peninsula by Shelikof Strait. .

Bison are herd animals - wild, big and protective. They don't take kindly to predators trying to pick off their young.

``They crowd up when threatened,'' Burton said. ``They don't hesitate to use their horns. Calves pretty much go to the center of the herd. When they run, they run as a herd. Cattle just aren't that alert.''

Burton, his wife, Kathy, and son Buck hold state grazing rights The examples and perspective in this article or section may not represent a worldwide view of the subject.
Please [ improve this article] or discuss the issue on the talk page.
 to around 24,000 acres - a broad swath of scenery-rich territory that includes 3,000-foot mountains, prime salmon streams, oceanfront cliffs, fossil-laden beaches and lupine-rich meadows.

His operation, which fronts the Pacific Ocean and is 50 miles from the nearest community of Kodiak, is something of an anomaly in Alaska, where livestock production isn't much of an industry.

The Burtons have been raising cattle on Narrow Cape since 1967. They started with Angus and Herefords, then moved to a mix of Charolais, Belted Galloway Belted Galloway

a breed of beef cattle, a variant of the Galloway breed. It is polled and black except for a genetically dominant wide band of white completely encircling its trunk behind the elbow.
, Scottish Highlanders and even a couple of longhorns to see if they could find a breed more bear-resistant.

None passed the test. Not even the well-armed longhorns.

From a high of 700 cattle, they've reduced the herd to around 60 head. Along the way, someone suggested they try raising buffalo. They brought up the first of their bison in 1980, from Wyoming. The herd now numbers more than 200 animals.

Blame that change in emphasis on the Kodiak bear - a fast, wily hunter that is anything but endangered in this region of Alaska.

Wildlife managers believe there's at least one bear per square mile or mile and a half on this Connecticut-size island, 250 miles south of Anchorage.

``The Kodiak bear is a generic term for coastal brown bears,'' said Roger Smith, an Alaska Department of Fish and Game biologist. ``They come in all colors of the wildlife rainbow here - mostly dark brown with some females more blondish.''

The largest of Kodiak's male bears weighs upward of more than; above.

See also: Upward
 1,500 pounds and stands nearly 10 feet tall. Their front paws, with curved claws that can extend 3-1/2 inches, are strong enough to break a bull's back.

Bear tracks larger than a man's size 12 boot aren't uncommon along stream beds or threaded through the alder-thick ravines on Burton's ranch. The picked-over carcass carcass, carcase

1. the body of an animal killed for meat. The head, the legs below the knees and hocks, the tail, the skin and most of the viscera are removed. The kidneys are left in and in most instances the body is split down the middle through the sternum and the vertebral
 of a 3-month-old kill, a mature Scottish Highlander cross, lies abandoned less than a mile from the family's two-story frame house.

Burton compares the way bears take after livestock to cats toying with mice. ``If a bear gets around cattle, eventually he'll kill one,'' he said. ``Some just become killer bears.''

The weather is wet and windy yet mild on Kodiak Island, meaning bears don't always den up in winter. If they do hibernate See hibernation mode. , it's often for short periods.

``They come out when it warms up,'' Burton said. ``I've lost cattle at all times of the year.''

Predation predation

Form of food getting in which one animal, the predator, eats an animal of another species, the prey, immediately after killing it or, in some cases, while it is still alive. Most predators are generalists; they eat a variety of prey species.
 is simply another of the risks you take when ranching in Alaska. But there are losses, and then there are losses.

``One year out of 600 cattle, we lost well over 100 head - probably 125 head, to bears,'' Burton said. ``One bear killed seven cattle in just one night. On average, we've had about 25 to 30 bear kills a year.''

That tends to gut the Kodiak Cattle Co.'s already lean profit margin since a mature steer prices out at around $500 to $700, Burton said. ``It doesn't take much of that to put you out of business.''

So enter the bison, which have been all but immune to bear attacks on the Burton ranch. Bill thinks he's lost at most three or four buffalo to bears since the early 1980s.

``They've bred all the smarts out of cattle. Buffalo are still pretty savvy,'' he said.

Like most grazer and meat-eater relationships, bison and bears have had a long and uneasy time of it in the American West. But it may not have been as deadly as the writers of the purple sage Noun 1. purple sage - silvery-leaved California herb with purple flowers
chaparral sage, Salvia leucophylla

salvia, sage - any of various plants of the genus Salvia; a cosmopolitan herb
 would have us believe.

``You read in the old western stories that the bears killed bison . . . that they actually hunted buffalo,'' said Charles Jonkel, a retired biologist from Missoula, Mont. ``But it may have been mostly misinterpretations.

``Bears are carrion eaters. They may have been just cleaning up on bison that had drowned or had died in falls or some other way,'' Jonkel said.

There hasn't been a single-known instance of a bear killing an adult bison at Yellowstone National Park Yellowstone National Park, 2,219,791 acres (899,015 hectares), the world's first national park (est. 1872), NW Wyo., extending into Montana and Idaho. It lies mainly on a broad plateau in the Rocky Mts., on the Continental Divide, c. , said John Varley John Varley is the name of:
  • John Varley (painter) (1778–1842), English painter and astrologer
  • John Varley (author) (born 1947), American science fiction author
  • John Varley (banker) (born c.1956), British CEO of Barclays Bank
, the park's chief biologist.

``The effect on calves would be pretty small as well,'' Varley said. ``Bison have very good predation avoidance behavior avoidance behavior,
n a conscious or unconscious defense mechanism by which a person tries to escape from unpleasant situations or feelings, such as anxiety and pain.
. They circle the wagons when threatened, like musk oxen oxen

adult castrated male of any breed of Bos spp.
. They're very formidable.''

Burton said he eventually plans to build his bison herd to 400 head and add some elk elk, name applied to several large members of the deer family. It most properly designates the largest member of the family, Alces alces, found in the northern regions of Eurasia and North America. In North America this animal is called moose. . He intends to sell some for meat and offer guided hunts for a few of his trophy-size animals.

``Buffalo meat is lean, it doesn't marble,'' Burton said. ``It's great for people who want to avoid cholesterol. It's also higher in protein. Elk (meat) is the same way.''

No matter what game animal mix the Burtons raise on their ranch, Kodiak's big brown bears will remain a major part of the equation.

``The concentration of bio-mass there is in so small an area that if you've got a bear that can smell all that - and their noses are their strongest asset - it will be hard for them to pass up,'' said the Department of Fish and Game's Smith.

CAPTION(S):

2 Photos

Photo: (1) Bill Burton, left, and his son Buck move more than 200 grazing grazing,
n See irregular feeding.


grazing

1. actions of herbivorous animals eating growing pasture or cereal crop.

2. area of pasture or cereal crop to be used as standing feed. See also pasture.
 bison to a meadow on their 24,000-acre ranch on Kodiak Island, Alaska.

(2) Two bull bison lock their horns on the now-thriving ranch of Bill Burton on Kodiak Island in Alaska.

Associated Press
COPYRIGHT 1996 Daily News
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1996, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Publication:Daily News (Los Angeles, CA)
Date:Jul 21, 1996
Words:1004
Previous Article:`PRIMARY COLORS' CONFESSION LEAVES SOME SEEING RED : WRITER'S DENIAL OF AUTHORING BOOK BRINGS SWARM OF ETHICAL QUESTIONS.(NEWS)
Next Article:UNCOVERING HUMAN COSTS OF COLD WAR : DECADES LATER, REPORTS SURFACE ABOUT U.S. PRISONERS IN RUSSIA.(NEWS)



Related Articles
Decrying wolves. (returning the grey wolf to the Rocky Mountain West)(On the Scene)
From great spirit to great steak? (bison)
Riches on the Range.
Red River. (McCormick's Quick Takes).
RANCHERS SEEK AID AFTER LATE RAINS STRAIN RESOURCES.(News)
NEVADA DESIRES TO TAME UPROAR OVER WILD HORSES.(News)
PARK OFFICIALS WANT TO CLEAR DEER, ELK OFF ISLAND.(NEWS)
Eugene couple makes a home for a herd of buffalo to roam.(Animals)(Ranch: A hobby has turned into a business off Fir Butte Road.)
NATURAL RESOURCES BOOK REVIEW.(Sports)(Review)
Idaho's elk ranch tragedy: when dozens of elk escaped from his ranch, Rex Rammell thought he faced the task of recovering his herd. Instead, he...

Terms of use | Copyright © 2009 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles