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Soon the Rosebud Sioux
Reservation will be home to 1,500 buffalo the largest
Native-owned bison herd in the country. (Photo by © Thomas
Lee / WWF-US)
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"We have always believed that bringing back the buffalo is important,
but the pandemic shows that it is urgent," said Wizipan Little
Elk. "We are all talking about food security and what the new normal
is going to be
We [at Rosebud] have to get back to our roots
and provide an example for the rest of the world."
Little Elk, CEO of the Rosebud Economic Development Corporation
(REDCO), is referring to the alarming problems the pandemic has
exposed in the huge, centralized system that provides most Americans
with their food. Over the last several months, numerous large meat
packers closed down after workers were found to be infected with
coronavirus. Supply chain problems have caused many farmers to have
to kill and dispose of millions of pigs and chickens, dump milk
and plow under vegetable crops. Meanwhile, sporadic food shortages
have been reported around the country, adding to the fear and insecurity
created by the pandemic.
With 1,500 buffalo given by the Department of the Interior over
five years, the Rosebud Sioux Tribe will establish the Wolakota
Buffalo Range and take a step toward economic sustainability and
their own food sovereigntyindependent of the nation's ailing
food system. The tribe also hopes the herd can help reestablish
its historical relationship to the buffalo. As the largest Native-American-owned
herd, it will revitalize the tribe by supplying school meals on
the reservation, welcoming visits from Lakota-language immersion
classes and making spiritually important items such as hides and
skulls available to community members. The tribe also plans to build
a small-scale meat-processing operation to make the grass-fed, humanely
raised meat available locally and, to generate revenue, to the public
as well, said Little Elk. By improving the health of the prairie
ecosystem and its ability to sequester carbon and remove greenhouse
gases from the atmosphere, he said, the herd will also help fight
climate change.
Aspects of the project are still in the planning stage. Eco-tourism
programs and a museum are under consideration, as are herd-sharing
arrangements that would allow community members and organizations
to purchase rights to animals and their offspring, perhaps eventually
starting their own herds. Any of these activities, to be realized,
must both stand on its own fiscally and contribute to the whole,
said Project Manager Aaron Epps. At this point, Wolakota can't calculate
the exact cost, if any, of the various benefits, he said.
"We can say that this project is meant to be for the good of Sicangu
[Rosebud] people and land," he added. "We are a community-focused
organization, so we are making every effort to ensure that tribal
citizens have easy access to opportunities the herd will provide."
Little Elk, who was an Interior Department official during the
Obama administration, saw the Wolakota project as a model for other
communities that wish to establish their own local, varied and healthy
sources of food. "We will lean into the pandemic," he said. "We
will not be intimidated by it. We at Rosebud, as one small community,
will do our part to rebuild the American nation."
Those principles of caring and responsibility are apparent in the
very word wolakota. "A literal translation is 'living the Lakota
way of life,'" Little Elk said. "In the buffalo project, we are
actively taking steps to embody the values and principles and the
very best of what it means to be Lakota: self-reliance, self-sufficiency,
being a good relative and taking care of othersnot just humans,
but other animals, plants and the environment."
The Interior Department views participating in the Wolakota project
as an exceptional opportunity, said Dr. Brendan J. Moynahan, National
Park Service science advisor and chair of DOI's Bison Working Group.
It is a way for the department to support the rugged, shared American
values Little Elk describes, and it lets DOI reaffirm its longtime
interest in the animal. An image of a bison appears in the department's
logo. "All Americans, all people, are captivated by the strength
of bison," Moynahan said.
For DOI, a compelling aspect of the Wolakota story was the variety
of ways one herd will serve the Rosebud community. Until now, American
bison herds have generally been managed for one of three primary
goals, said Little Elk: They have been commercial, for-profit herds,
mainly intended to produce meat for sale. Or they have been tribes'
small culturally oriented herds of about 50 to 500 animals that
provide occasional meat sales. Or bison have been managed from a
park perspective, largely for public enjoyment and education, such
as the animals at Yellowstone National Park.
The Wolakota Buffalo Range does not just synthesize a range of
Rosebud ideas and aspirations. Decades of work at DOI also come
together in the project, according to Moynahan. These include years
of discussions about bison management with park employees and painstaking
scientific work to understand and preserve buffalo genetic diversity.
To provide ongoing support for these efforts, DOI has just announced
a 10-year department-wide Buffalo
Conservation Initiative. At the same time, according to Moynahan,
there's newly invigorated interest in bison among tribes and other
organizations. "Wolakota is emblematic of this moment," he said.
Wolakota is both a homecoming and a reunion, according to Carter
Roberts, president and CEO of World Wildlife Fund (WWF), which is
working with REDCO and the Department of the Interior to develop
the herd. The buffalo are returning to a landscape and a people
with which they long shared a symbiotic relationship, Roberts said.
WWF involvement in the project includes finding financial backing
for land leasing, transportation of the buffalo to their new home,
and other practical matters, said Bison Team Lead Dennis Jorgensen,
who works with the organization's Northern Great Plains Program.
At Rosebud, WWF will engage in ongoing environmental monitoring
to ensure that Wolakota's tract continues to support the number
of buffalo placed on it. In addition to the Wolakota Buffalo Project,
WWF works with other bison-restoration projects, including one at
the reservation of the Fort Peck Assiniboine & Sioux Tribes,
headquartered in Poplar, Mont.
WWF learned a great deal from the Fort Peck project about working
with tribal communities, said Jorgensen. Buffalo are essential to
culture, spirituality and history, he noted, but they must also
be a functioning part of contemporary lifefeeding elders and
schoolchildren, for example. Sometimes, WWF found, solving a need
was as simple as providing transportation to the remote area where
the herd is pastured so tribal members can enjoy viewing it.
Nowadays, according to Jorgensen, a herd may be a lifesaver in
a very immediate way. "It may help a tribe feed people who must
shelter in place to minimize Covid-19 exposure." If establishing
a tribal herd is about conservation only, it can end up being an
economic burden, he added. "It has to be sustainable in a meaningful
way."
A Brutal Past
Once numbering in the tens of millions, buffalo carved ecological
niches continent-wide for innumerable other plants and animals.
For many indigenous people, bison were a primary source of food,
clothing and housing materials, hunting and cooking implements,
and more. During the 19th century, however, the U.S. government
encouraged the extermination of the bison as a means to subdue the
tribes and facilitate the country's western expansion.
Starting in the 1850s, the federal government cheered on military
men, settlers, hunters, and other newcomers to the American West
as they killed bison at a rate of hundreds of thousands per year.
They even shot them from train windows, writes Carolyn Merchant
in American Ecological History: An Introduction. An average
hunter took down 100 a day, she reports. After barely 20 years of
this killing spree, just several hundred bison remained.
Starved of a critical resource, tribes were forced onto reservations.
Native people understood well that the shameful process was intentional,
the late Sioux elder Philip Lane told me in 2000, when he was 85.
"[In] order to get rid of the 'Indian problem,' you had to get rid
of the Indians," Lane said. "The government wanted settlers to come
in and break up that prairie ground. It was never meant to be broken
up. It was all buffalo pasture."
The subsequent widespread plowing and agricultural development
of the Plains, following on the heels of the sudden extermination
of the great buffalo herds, was a heavy hit for the continent's
ecological balance. Among other outcomes, the Dust Bowl resulted
from trying to make the Plains into farmland.
Return of the Buffalo
Named the National Mammal of the United States by Congress in 2016,
today wild bison thrive by the tens of thousands in tribal, federal
and other public herds. That is thanks to conservation efforts by
tribes, states, the Department of the Interior, the World Wildlife
Fund, the InterTribal Buffalo Council and other individuals and
groups.
To make up Rosebud's herd, animals will be chosen each year from
among surplus federally-owned bisonthose beyond the comfortable
carrying capacity of the grasslands of various federal parks, according
to Moynahan. He saw Wind Cave National Park as one probable source
for animals, a resonant choice given the Lakota legend recounting
the mutual emergence of buffalo and their human kin from Wind Cave
in primordial time.
The federal government's genetic testing criteria assures the tribe
that it will receive animals that are as much as possible like historic
buffalo, said Project Manager Epps. The care the government takes
is a necessity, given what Moynahan calls the genetic "bottleneck"
that bison went through at the turn of the 20th century, when so
few remained. Another pressure has come from the meat industry's
continual efforts to cross bison with cattle and produce another
type of saleable meat.
Despite all these hurdles, according to Moynahan, the federal government
has done excellent work in conserving bison as a species and preserving
their original genetic makeup. DOI's new Buffalo Conservation Initiative
will not only carefully select animals for Rosebud, it will also
swap individual buffalo among federal herds to support their genetic
diversity overall.
The Interior Department calls bison the nation's "ecological engineers."
When the first group of approximately 200 arrives at Rosebud this
fall, they're expected to get right to work, renovating a chunk
of North America28,000 acres of abandoned cow pasture.
Yucca have invaded particularly over-grazed portions of the tract.
No problem! said Jorgensen. Bison are known to shove their heads
into the tough, spiny plants, tear them up and devour their juicy
roots, he explained. Meanwhile, as they accomplish that job, their
cloven hooves continually press the seeds of prairie grasses and
herbs into the range's soil, an essential process for helping these
kinds of seeds sprout. (If you look into the small depression of
a buffalo's hoofprint, you can identify little seeds ranged on its
sides and see how this process gets underway.) The end result is
that native plants will revegetate the areas the buffalo have so
helpfully cleared.
These and other bison activities will transform the area. They
are especially fond of wallowingthrowing themselves on their
backs and wriggling vigorously. In doing so, they press even more
native seeds into the ground and create shallow pools that catch
rainwater essential to the plants and animals of this arid land.
They've been shown to support the revival of a rare, ecologically
influential blue butterfly. Native birds use their fur to line their
nests.
Scientists continue to discover the subtle ways in which bison
and our landscape have co-evolved, according to Moynahan. "[Their]
intense grazing caused grasslands to green up faster, more intensely,
and for a longer duration," wrote Dr. Chris Geremia and colleagues
in a November
2019 paper in the Proceedings of the National Academy of
Sciences. By stimulating springtime plant growth, bison provide
themselves and other animals with a continual supply of high-quality
forage, the scientists found. "It's an example of what we're still
learning about this incredible animal," said Moynahan.
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Sturdy fencing material
arrives at Wolakota Buffalo Range, on the Rosebud Sioux Reservation,
in South Dakota. The fence will enclose some 200 buffalo this
fall and, within 5 years, a total of 1,500. (Photo by Luan
Venter)
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Before Wolakota Buffalo Range's new inhabitants take up residence
on the Rosebud Sioux Reservation, a fence must be constructed to
prevent them from wandering onto nearby cattle ranches. But not
just any fence. It has to have smooth top and bottom wires, along
with its midsection barbed wires. "This is not just a bison operation,
but also about re-building an ecosystem," Epps said. Small animals
will be able to slide under the barrier without harm, and elk and
deer will be able to safely jump it.
The fence must also be able to contain the massive buffalo. Weighing
in at up to 2,000 pounds and able to reach speeds of 40 miles per
hour, they can challenge ordinary barriers, Epps said. And they
are determined to roam. Fortunately, they're also prudent. Before
they jump a fence, they measure it. Epps said he has been told by
experienced buffalo handlers that bison come up to a fence and check
whether they can put their chin on top of it. "If they can," Epps
said, "over they go." At five and one-half feet, Wolakota Buffalo
Range's fence should deter even the herd's top athletes.
Beginning of a Long Recovery
The coronavirus pandemic is presenting the United States with devastating
challenges to health and to its ability to make food consistently
available around the country. It is also shining a harsh light on
the nation's inequities, as both death rates and economic pain fall
most heavily on poor communities and on people of color.
Covid-19 has widened already-existing gaps in income, health care,
education, child poverty and hunger, employment and housing. Established
by what Martin Luther King called "battles for racial supremacy"
that began in the 1500s, our nation still leans heavily on structures
of inequality and alienation today.
In Little Elk's view, the United States is at the beginning of
a long recovery. Wolakota Buffalo Range can show us how to make
a start, each group in its own way and in its own place. "We all
need hope and real models for action," he said.
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