Wood Bison

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Wood Bison

Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Artiodactyla
Family: Bovidae
Subfamily: Bovinae
Genus: Bison
Species: B. bison
Subspecies: B. bison athabascae
Binomial name
Bison bison athabascae
(Linnaeus, 1758)

The Wood Bison (Bison bison athabascae) or Wood Buffalo is a distinct northern subspecies of the North American Bison whose original range included much of the boreal forest regions of Alaska, Yukon, western Northwest Territories, northeastern British Columbia, northern Alberta, and northwestern Saskatchewan (the words "buffalo" and "bison" are often used interchangeably in popular parlance; however, the technically correct name for this North American bovine is "bison"). It is included on the Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada (COSEWIC) Threatened species list.

The Wood Bison differs from the Plains Bison (Bison bison bison), the other surviving North American subspecies, in a number of important ways. Most notably, the Wood Bison is heavier, with large males weighing over 900 kilograms (approximately 2000 lbs), making it the largest terrestrial animal in North America. The highest point of the Wood Bison is well ahead of its front legs, while the Plains Bison's highest point is directly above the front legs.

Reduced by hunting from a total population of about 168,000 to less than 250 individuals by the year 1900, the Wood Bison has since recovered to a total population of approximately 3,536, largely as a result of conservation efforts by Canadian government agencies. In 1988, the Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada (COSEWIC) changed the subspecies' conservation status from "endangered" to "threatened". A subsequent reevaluation by COSEWIC in 2000 confirmed the status of "threatened".

Publicly-owned free-ranging herds in Alberta, British Columbia, Yukon, and the Northwest Territories comprise 90% of existing Wood Bison, although six smaller public and private captive breeding herds with conservation objectives comprise approximately 10% of the total (n≈900). These captive herds as well as two large isolated free-ranging herds in the Yukon and Northwest Territories, all of which derive from disease-free and morphologically representative founding stock from northern Wood Buffalo National Park in northeastern Alberta and southern Northwest Territories, are particularly important for conservation and recovery purposes because the larger free-ranging herds in and around Wood Buffalo National Park were infected with bovine brucellosis and tuberculosis after 7,000 Plains Bison (Bison bison bison) were trans-shipped by barge from Buffalo National Park (Wainwright, Alberta) to Wood Buffalo National Park by the federal government during the 1920s. This trans-shipment of Plains Bison also resulted in the hybridization of all known wood bison (i.e., there are no longer any "genetically pure" Wood Bison). Both diseases remain endemic in the free-ranging herds in and around Wood Buffalo National Park. The diseases represent a serious management issue for governments, various local Aboriginal groups, and the cattle industry (which is rapidly encroaching on the Park's boundaries). Disease management strategies and initiatives began in the 1950s, and have yet to result in a reduction of the incidence of either disease despite considerable expenditure and increased public involvement.

In the United States, small herds of wood bison are also located in the Alaska Wildlife Conservation Center. It is a private non-profit facility about 45 minutes south of Anchorage, Alaska on the Seward Highway. (n=15) The wood bison can also be found in "Pleistocene Park", Siberia (n=30), as well as in several zoos and private game ranches.

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