After 120 years of conservation efforts, Yellowstone bison are a single breeding population, researchers discover
March 5, 2025
After 120 years of conservation efforts, Yellowstone bison are a single breeding population, researchers discover
by Courtney Price, Texas A&M University

Credit: Pixabay/CC0 Public Domain
Researchers from the Texas A&M College of Veterinary Medicine and Biomedical Sciences (VMBS) have discovered that bison in Yellowstone National Parkthe only group of American bison that has continually existed as wildlife in the United Statesnow consist of a single large, interbreeding population derived from multiple historic bison herds.
Population genetic studies completed just 20 years ago found that Yellowstone bison populations retained much of their historic breeding patterns and were, in fact, two unique herds living within the national park. ... However, in a study published in the
Journal of Heredity, VMBS researchers found a change in breeding behavior in the park and now recommend that Yellowstone bison should be managed as one large interbreeding herd. ... "This finding certainly has a direct impact on the long-term conservation and management of this iconic bison population," said Dr. James Derr, a professor in the VMBS' Department of Veterinary Pathobiology (VTPB).
Bison like those in Yellowstone once suffered a population crisis that conservationists call the "population bottleneck" of the 19th century. By the early 1900s, American bison numbers had been reduced by 99.9% across North America and only 23 wild bison were known to have survived poaching in Yellowstone.
"In one of the greatest wildlife conservation success stories of all time, a small number of domestic bison from western Montana and the Texas Panhandle were introduced in 1902 to existing animals in Yellowstone in the hopes that they would create a stable and thriving population in the world's first national park," Derr said
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