A project to re-establish wood bison in Alaska has suffered a setback. The Lower Innoko Yukon Rivers wood bison herd experienced a major decline last winter, and as KUAC’s Dan Bross reports, it’s not the first time adverse weather has impacted the herd.  

 

Alaska Department of Fish and Game wood bison biologist Tom Seaton says the latest population survey shows the herd dropped over the last year from about 150 to 72 animals, a decline he attributes to extreme winter weather, with heavy snow on the ground from last October through the end of this past May.

Seaton:  “It was just a bad combination of things: difficult snow to get through, to get to the forage, snow that lasted along time and snow that quite deep.”

Seaton says the current population of 72 wood bison is the lowest since state, federal tribal partners working to reestablish the animals in Alaska transplanted 130 from Alberta, Canada in 2015. Another 28 Canadian animals were added in 2022. Seaton emphasizes that the Innoko-Yukon Rivers herd has experienced regular weather driven fluctuations since 2015.

Seaton: “Had a couple years of slow growth, then had a decline from around 140 to near 90 and then had s jump back over a hundred and then back down to ninety something. Then a couple jumps above a hundred, all the way up to 150 last year, and then now down to 70 some. And you know if we project that in the future it could be anything. We could continue to have growth years or decline years, really just dependent on how the snow conditions stack up.”

Meanwhile planning continues to expand the effort to reestablish wood bison in Alaska. Seaton says the focus is on sites in the Eastern Interior, where snow cover tends to be lighter.

Seaton: “So Yukon Flats, lower Tanana drainage, and upper Tanana drainage, all have conditions that are more conducive to bison performance.”

Seaton says they are working with local groups through a public planning process to identify a second wood bison restoration site, to which animals could be transplanted as early as next summer. The Wood Bison Restoration Project is primarily paid for with federal Pittman Robertson funds.

View Original Story by Dan Bross, KUAC