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“Bison restoration in collaboration with tribal fish and wildlife management agencies is truly a success story and we are very excited to recognize these incredible bison bulls from the Fort Peck Reservation in our records program,” commented the Boone and Crockett Club’s director of big game records, Kyle Lehr. “The origin of our program was to record what was thought to be the vanishing big game in the country and to mark conservation success based on the principle that the existence of mature, male specimens is an indicator of overall population and habitat health. The Fort Peck Tribes have led the way on establishing a wild, free-ranging herd of bison and it makes sense to include these incredible animals in the Club’s nearly century old Records of North American Big Game.”
The Fort Peck Tribes’ Fish & Game Department has developed a management plan for the bison herd that was moved to the reservation in 1999 using genetically pure bison from the Yellowstone National Park herd. The Tribes’ herd is now maintained through a managed hunting program at approximately 700 animals, which is the carrying capacity on the 30,000 acres of the reservation that provides quality habitat for bison. Each year the Fish & Game Department allows 40 management hunts and seven hunts for mature bulls, these tags are issued using a random draw system except for one bull permit that is auctioned off to benefit wildlife on the reservation. In addition to the wild, free-ranging herd of bison, the Tribes also manage a quarantine enclosure that houses bison captured through Yellowstone National Park’s population management program. This program houses animals entirely separate from the hunting program and serves to move bison to other tribes and entities looking to build a herd of genetically pure bison. Fort Peck has successfully transplanted animals through this program to areas like Oklahoma and Kodiak Island, Alaska.
“I am very pleased to hear that the Boone and Crockett Club recognizes bison from the Fort Peck Indian Reservation as a truly wild and free-ranging herd,” said Robbie Magnan, Director of Fish & Game for the Fort Peck Tribes. “We have worked hard to maintain this management program to meet the level of Fair Chase for those fortunate enough to draw a permit.”
“We look forward to accepting bison from Fort Peck into our records program and are excited to see bison restoration continue in North America, where appropriate,” concluded Lehr. “It is always exciting to see when big game animals are doing well across their ranges and being managed for success.”