Thursday, September 24, 2020

Improving bison health, production




This is welcome. The bison has begun the long generational process of domestication.  We need truly tame herds able to work with tame cattle herds in a mob grazing operation.  That means trained to use an electeric fence.

There are also diseases to shake off and lost genetics that also need to be  recovered as we pass into the future.

The herd remains small, yet a simple financial program could easily get this herd to double every five years to fully utilize hte landscape.  

Where i do want to  see them is in the boreal forest which is difficult for cattle.  There herded with moose and large deer, we may well produce an fully active and managed agro biome supported in the winter by bull rush silage.

Improving bison health, production

Center for Bison Studies opens in Rapid City, South Dakota

21-Sep-2020 11:40 AM EDT, 

by South Dakota State University
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The Center of Excellence for Bison Studies will focus on research activities to improve bison herd health and production and the economic viability of both private and tribal bison producers.

https://www.newswise.com/articles/improving-bison-health-production?sc=dwhn


Newswise — The future of America’s national mammal continues to brighten as officials from South Dakota State University, the National Bison Association and the National Buffalo Foundation formally launched the Center of Excellence for Bison Studies. The new center is headquartered at SDSU’s West River Research and Extension facility in Rapid City, South Dakota.


The U.S. 2018 Farm Bill authorizes the USDA’s National Institute for Food and Agriculture to recognize centers of excellence in research, extension and education in the food and agricultural sciences. The Center of Excellence for Bison Studies will be coordinated through SDSU, but will include active participation by researchers and extension officials from other land grant universities, including 1994 tribal land grant colleges and universities.

The center will focus on research activities to improve bison herd health and production and the economic viability of both private and tribal bison producers.

Plans for the Center of Excellence began in May 2017 when leaders of the National Buffalo Foundation, the National Bison Association’s Science and Research Committee and Sinte Gleska University convened with SDSU researchers at the main campus in Brookings, South Dakota. Participants at the session agreed on a number of research priorities, but recognized that a coordinated effort was needed to generate the resources to underwrite those initiatives.

“We will be pulling together the leading experts in their fields to help us gain a better understanding of this animal and the ecosystems it lives in and to develop new resources for the people who raise bison,” said Kristi Cammack, the center’s new director.

Bill Gibbons, Director of the South Dakota Agricultural Experiment Station at SDSU and Associate Dean for Research, added, “We realized in that 2017 meeting that there were many un-answered questions regarding all aspects of bison, ranging from their role in the landscapes they occupy to their importance in Native American culture to their significance in agriculture. And, we recognized that there are many qualified researchers interested in taking on those projects. What was missing was a unified commitment to bring together the resources to support that research.”

Phil Baird, Provost of Sinte Gleska University in South Dakota, noted, “Bison are once again coming back to tribal lands across the country. Being a part of the center will help tribal managers as they restore both cultural herds and grow tribal nation-building herds.”

The Center of Excellence represents a significant milestone in the restoration of bison herds to North America, according to Dave Carter, Executive Director of the National Bison Association. “Our knowledge on how best to manage our herds has evolved through a lot of trial and error, supplemented by scattered studies at universities across North America. The Center of Excellence will bring together academicians, ranchers and tribal bison managers in a collaborative commitment to help us be better stewards of our herds.”

The National Bison Association’s Science and Research Committee will work closely with the center’s leadership to identify key research and outreach priorities.

“Having the Center of Excellence in place and with SDSU’s direct involvement, we all see a much broader view of the future of bison, while at the same time opening many fresh opportunities to expand our fundraising initiatives,” said Cecil Miskin, chair of the National Buffalo Foundation. The 501(c)(3) charitable foundation, which is dedicated to being the major trusted funding source for bison research and education, will embark upon a major fundraising campaign in the coming months to provide the resources to underwrite the center’s initial research projects.

Cammack will oversee the day-to-day operations of thecCenter, under the direction of an 11-member board comprised of SDSU, National Bison Association and National Buffalo Foundation officials, bison ranchers and tribal representatives. The center will operate under a formal memorandum of agreement established among SDSU, the National Bison Association and the National Buffalo Foundation.

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