 | Yellowstone National Park: Encyclopedia II - Yellowstone National Park - Biology and ecology
Yellowstone National Park - Biology and ecology
Main articles: Animals of Yellowstone, Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem
The dominant tree species in the park is Lodgepole pine, however, varieties of spruce, fir and aspen are also common. There are at least 600 species of trees and plants found in the park, some of which are found nowhere else.
Yellowstone is widely considered to be the finest megafauna wildlife habitats in the lower 48 states. Animals found in the park include the majestic American bison (buffalo), grizzly bear, black bear, elk, moose, mule deer, pronghorn, wolverine, bighorn sheep and mountain lion (puma). The Yellowstone Lake Cutthroat Trout is a highly sought after trophy fish by anglers yet has been threatened in recent years by the suspicious introduction of lake trout that compete for spawning grounds and are known to consume smaller cutthroat trout.
The relatively large bison populations that exist in the park are a concern for ranchers who fear that the bison can transmit bovine diseases to their domesticated cousins. In fact, about half of Yellowstone's bison have been exposed to brucellosis, a bacterial disease that came to North America with European cattle and may cause cattle to miscarry. The disease has little effect on park bison and no reported case of transmission from wild bison to a visitor or to domestic livestock has ever been filed. But since the possibility of contagion still exists, the State of Montana believes its "brucellosis-free" status may be jeopardized if bison are in proximity to cattle. Montana has approved a bison hunt for fall of 2005, with 50 licenses issued to shoot bison that have left the park. Elk also carry the disease, but this popular game species is not considered a threat to livestock.
To combat the perceived threat, National Park personnel regularly harass bison herds back into the park when they venture outside of park borders. Animal rights activists state that is a cruel practice and that the possibility for disease transmission is not as great as some ranchers maintain. Ecologists also point out that the bison are just traveling to seasonal grazing areas that lie within the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem that have been converted to cattle grazing (most of these areas are also within United States National Forests).
A controversial decision by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (which oversees threatened and endangered species), is the recent reintroduction of wolves into the park's ecosystem. For many years the wolves were hunted and harassed until they become locally extinct in the 1930s. The smaller cousin of the wolf, the coyote, then became the park's top predator. However, the coyote is not able to bring down any large animal in the park and the result of this lack of a top predator on these populations was a marked increase in lame and sick megafauna. Since the reintroduction of wolves in the late 1990s this trend has started to reverse.
However, ranchers in surrounding areas are concerned about wolves that venture outside the park and prey on their livestock, especially sheep and cattle. For the most part, wolves kill what they were taught to kill as pups, so they tend to prey on elk rather than sheep, but once a wolf pack begins eating sheep and training the pups to eat sheep, there is little recourse but to destroy the offending pack members. Ranchers are compensated for their losses if they can prove that wolves killed the livestock, but they contend that it is often difficult to prove that the kills were not made by coyotes or wild dogs.
Reintroduced wolf packs do not carry endangered species status, so ranchers can kill wolves that threaten their herds, but wolves relocating from Canada on their own have begun to merge with the Yellowstone population, making it difficult to discern which wolves are protected and which are not.
The National Park Service was generally not in favor of the reintroduction citing evidence that wolves had already begun to return on their own, reestablishing themselves in very limited numbers prior to the wolf reintroduction. Wildlife biologists employed by the National Park Service had documented rare sightings made personally and from eyewitness accounts. It was a quiet concern that the compact agreed on by federal agencies and the states in which Yellowstone is located would ultimately provide less protection to the wolf, because the threatened status would be amended to appease local interests such as ranchers who would not likely face prosecution under the reintroduction agreement.
In Yellowstone's hot waters, bacteria form mats consisting of trillions of individual bacteria. The surfaces of these mats assume bizarre shapes, and flies and other arthropods live on the mats, even in the midst of the bitterly cold winters.
Other related archives1872, 1976, 1978, 2004, Absaroka Mountains, American Civil War, American bison, Animal rights, Animals of Yellowstone, Ashton, Idaho, Atlantic Ocean, Beartooth Highway, Beartooth Mountains, Blackfoot, Boeing Yellowstone, Boise, Idaho, Cody, Wyoming, Craters of the Moon National Monument, Crow, Earth, Elk, European, F.V. Hayden, Fort Yellowstone, Gardiner, Montana, Geothermal areas of Yellowstone, Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone, Grand Teton National Park, Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem, Gulf of Mexico, Harry Yount, Henry Washburn, Idaho, International Biosphere Reserve, Island Park Caldera, Jim Bridger, John Colter, Lava Creek Tuff, Lewis and Clark Expedition, Lodgepole pine, March 1, March 10, Mexico, Middle Rocky Mountains, Mississippi Valley, Missouri River, Montana, Montanans, Mount St. Helens, Nathaniel P. Langford, National Park Service, Native Americans, North America, October 26, Old Faithful Geyser, Old Faithful Inn, Pacific Ocean, Philetus Norris, Red Lodge, Montana, September 8, Snake River, Snake River Plain, Snake River Plains, Steamboat Geyser, Teton Mountains, Thomas Moran, U.S. Congress, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, U.S. Geological Survey, U.S. National Park, Ulysses S. Grant, United Nations, United States Army, United States National Forests, West Yellowstone, Montana, William Henry Jackson, Wind River Range, World Heritage Site, Wyoming, Yellowstone Caldera, Yellowstone Lake, Yellowstone Lake Cutthroat Trout, Yellowstone River, anglers, arrowheads, ash, aspen, bacterial, basaltic, bighorn sheep, bison, black bear, bovine, brucellosis, caldera, cattle, continent, continental divide, coyote, crater, cubic kilometers, cutthroat trout, ecosystem, ecosystems, elk, endangered species, extinction, fir, firefighters, fires, fishing, flash floods, flood basalts, geologic formation, geothermal, geysers, grizzly bear, grizzly bears, hot springs, hotspot, human, ice ages, ice dams, iron, kayaking, lake trout, lightning, lower 48 states, magma chamber, megafauna, millimeters, miscarry, moose, mountain lion, mountain ranges, mule deer, national park, obsidian, other geothermal features, plain, plateau, prescribed fires, pronghorn, pumice, pyroclastic, resurgent domes, rhyolitic, river, sea level, sheep, spruce, states, sulfur, supervolcano, temperate zone, topographic, valley, volcanic, volcanic eruption, welded tuff, wolverine, wolves
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Biology and ecology", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |