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Yellowstone bison going to Turner ranch

Billionaire Ted Turner is getting 88 Yellowstone National Park bison from a faltering Montana program that was supposed to put the disease-free animals on public or tribal lands. The animals were spared several years ago from a periodic slaughter of bison leaving Yellowstone because of worries about animal disease. They are now in a joint federal- state quarantine compound in southern Montana's Paradise Valley but could be moved to Turner's ranch within weeks, state officials said Tuesday. Montana turned down requests from a Wyoming state park and at least two American Indian reservations that wanted some or all of the bison. Turner will care for the animals for five years and in return wants 75 percent of their offspring, an estimated 188 bison. Montana would get an estimated 150 bison back in 2015. Conservation groups, a coalition of tribes and U.S. Department of Agriculture veterinarians opposed the proposal as a privatization of public wildlife. "There were a lot of people that wanted them on public lands. We're not ready," said Montana wildlife chief David Risley. "The Turner option, all it does is buy us time to come up with a long-term solution." Turner, founder of CNN and former owner of the Atlanta Braves, already owns more than 50,000 bison at sites across the country. He sells bison burgers through his namesake restaurant chain but wants the Yellowstone animals because of their pure genetics. Montana Gov. Brian Schweitzer invited Turner to submit an offer last fall, after an earlier plan to move them onto a Wyoming reservation fell through. The Indian reservations were not equipped to take the bison, and there were fears Wyoming would sell some of the animals, Risley said. Wyoming state veterinarian Jim Logan said there was no such intent. He argued the animals should have been kept in the public domain instead of given to Turner. "But politics and money and names talk," Logan said.

 

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