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Thousand Pound Ninjas

Posted: Sep 25 2022 5:56 am
by joebartels
Go admire* slipper-footed neighbors at Grand Canyon
https://azdailysun.com/news/science/the ... f7d0d.html
* From a safe quarter mile away, carrying and continuously consuming water, leave an itinerary, never hike alone, do not speed en route

Re: Thousand Pound Ninjas

Posted: Sep 25 2022 4:19 pm
by big_load
joebartels wrote: Sep 25 2022 5:56 am Go admire* slipper-footed neighbors at Grand Canyon
https://azdailysun.com/news/science/the ... f7d0d.html
* From a safe quarter mile away, carrying and continuously consuming water, leave an itinerary, never hike alone, do not speed en route
The story contained this observation: “I do hear a lot from bison managers that they don’t go in the woods and they don't climb,” she reported. “But those things happen at Grand Canyon.”

Although that may be a common belief, there's plenty of historical evidence to the contrary. After all, Wood Bison are a recognized subspecies that were formerly widespread in the boreal forest. It's noteworthy that they're also called Mountain Bison. I was pondering this topic while reading about Zebulon Pike's 1806 expedition. During parts of the journey, they subsisted primarily on Bison, especially in the winter as they were up into the ponderosas as they started to cross the Sangre de Cristos.

Re: Thousand Pound Ninjas

Posted: Sep 25 2022 9:56 pm
by Alston_Neal
big_load wrote:Wood Bison are a recognized subspecies that were formerly widespread in the boreal forest
This is interesting since I have grown up in AZ being told that bison and elk were introduced (elk) and reintroduced (bison). That historically there was a bison subspecies long since disappeared, but never elk. Then again there was a time AZGF taught me that the Kaibab squirrel muted from the Abert's squirrel when the canyon grew wider.