The Great American Bison Herd, Now held Captive in Northern Mexico, gathers at the Border to Sing, “Don’t Fence Me In”
In William DeBuys recent book, “A  Great Aridness”, he discusses biological diversity at  El Uno Ecological Reserve, located within the  Greater Janos Grasslands,
 in Chihuahua, Mexico. Although his primary focus  is on scrubland 
encroachment and related stress on black-tailed prairie dog  
populations, he also touches upon the American Bison herd now located 
there.
In 2009,  twenty-three bison
 from Wind Cave National Park, South Dakota arrived at  Janos to start a
 breeding herd within northern Mexico. Unlike ninety-five  percent of 
the bison in North America, the Wind Cave bison herd is genetically  
pure, containing no cattle genes. Unlike cattle, which stay and feed to 
the  root, bison eat and roam, leaving some of the plant intact. Their 
heavy step  breaks up the soil and helps grass seeds grow.
In 2009,  National Park Traveler,  Bob Janiskee
 wrote, “The trans-border herd referenced here lives north of  the Janos
 grasslands and migrates seasonally into Hidalgo County, New Mexico.  
This is actually a bit of a problem, since the wild bison is a protected
 animal  in Mexico, where it is considered endangered. It is not 
protected in the U.S.,  where it is seen as a grazer, competing with 
livestock”.
On May 11, 2011, the  Nature Conservancy
 staff at El Uno Ecological Reserve rejoiced with the  birth of a female
 bison calf. It was the first calf conceived locally since  2009, when 
the Conservancy and a Mexican national working group initiated the Bison
 Reintroduction Project.
From Canada to Mexico, grasslands are relatively similar. There are only
 a few  differences, such as the temperature in summer, the amount of 
snow in winter,  and their native vegetation. That is why the bison herd
 in El Uno, coming from  South Dakota has been able to adapt well to the
 grasslands at the Janos Biosphere Reserve.
According to the U.S.  National Library of Medicine,
 “Archeological records and historical accounts  from Mexico document 
that the historic range of the bison included northern  Mexico and parts
 of Southern New Mexico. The Janos-Hidalgo bison herd, one of  the few 
free-ranging bison herds in North America, has moved between Chihuahua, 
 Mexico, and New Mexico, since at least the 1920s. The cross-border 
bison herd in  the Chihuahuan Desert grasslands and scrublands 
demonstrates that the species  can persist in desert landscapes”.
Author William DeBuys had inspired me to look deeper into both the 
promise and  the plight of the Janos Valley bison herd. While writing, I
 could hear the  scratchy, obnoxious sound of cable news in the 
background. As I arose to turn  off the TV, I heard that the U.S. Senate
 had reached a “compromise” on the 2013 Senate Immigration Bill.
The
 compromise was one that only a group of isolated, Washington Beltway  
politicians could concoct. The new compromise includes seven hundred 
miles of  impenetrable border fencing and twenty thousand new border 
patrol agents. If all  of the proposed agents were to arrive at the 
border simultaneously, there would  be one border patrol agent standing 
every 250 feet, all along its seven hundred  mile length.
Apparently, there is no federal money to protect grasslands and 
biodiversity  along the U.S. Mexican Border. Instead, all the money will
 go to a vast “Maginot  Line” of border defenses, to include fixed 
camera towers and mobile surveillance  systems. This "standing army" 
would protect the U.S. against a feared “third  wave of illegal aliens”.
 I can see the fence manufacturers, construction  contractors and 
military equipment manufacturers salivating over their  anticipated 
contracts. Who needs the hassle of foreign wars when we can have a  
fully militarized border right here at home?
 Soon
 enough, if conservatives win and conservationists lose, the Janos 
Valley  bison herd will become a casualty of the 2013 Senate Immigration
 Bill. In order  to live, the herd must travel north and south across 
the Chihuahuan Desert,  including parts of Mexico and Southern New 
Mexico.
Soon
 enough, if conservatives win and conservationists lose, the Janos 
Valley  bison herd will become a casualty of the 2013 Senate Immigration
 Bill. In order  to live, the herd must travel north and south across 
the Chihuahuan Desert,  including parts of Mexico and Southern New 
Mexico.
While a cross-border consortium of governmental and non-governmental 
agencies works  tirelessly to restore and enhance the desert 
environment, our federal government  plans the largest environmental 
destruction project in U.S. history. If even a  few of those Senators 
would visit the desert, they could foresee see the  consequences of 
their actions.
Desertification,  including the encroachment of scrub-lands and the creation of dust bowls
 and  sand-prairies is a problem facing most of the United States. Wall 
building and  heavy vehicle traffic in our fragile deserts may indeed 
stop a few border  crossings. In their zeal to “seal the border”, 
Congress may well destroy the  desert bionetwork. The unintended consequences of their actions may render the  border area unlivable for humans, prairie dogs and the American Bison.
The Mexican-American War ended in 1848. One hundred sixty-five years 
later is a  poor time to spend $30 billion of our tax dollars to fight 
an ecological war  against a fragile desert environment. Our Senate seems to say, “Give me a home  where the buffalo roam, but at any cost, prevent ‘them’ from crossing the  Mexican border”.
   
By James McGillis at 05:01 PM | Environment | Comments (0) | Link

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