November 2, 2006
NASA
SNOW DATA HELPS MAINTAIN NATION'S
LARGEST, OLDEST BISON HERD
Grainy photographs of America's Old
West recall a time when large bison herds
migrated across wide prairie lands, 30 million strong, with the
changing
seasons determining their path and destination. Now, NASA satellite
data and
computer modeling and U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) information
are
helping track the remnants of this once mighty herd in Yellowstone
National Park
as they migrate with the melting snowpack.
The
Yellowstone bison are the only herd in lower North
America to survive since prehistoric times. Hunting
and later poaching dwindled their number down to fewer than 50 animals
by 1902.
Prior to 1700, millions of bison roamed through Montana,
Wyoming and Idaho
in areas that later became Yellowstone National Park,
the
world's first national park. The bison herd at Yellowstone
has grown to about 3,900 animals thanks to creative initiatives at the
park to
restore and maintain the population.
Scientists at
California State University Monterey Bay
(CSUMB) and Montana State University at Bozeman, and the National Park
Service
(NPS) have collaborated on a five-year, NASA-funded project that uses
NASA
satellite data and computer modeling to help park officials better
understand
the relationship between snow accumulation and the way it melts during
the
period when bison migrate between habitats at lower and higher
elevations.
Every winter,
the deep snow in Yellowstone
drives most bison to lower elevations as they embark on their quest for
food.
In this search, some bison will migrate beyond the Park's borders. When
bison
are outside the boundaries of Yellowstone, the management authority on
the
northern boundaries of Yellowstone shifts to the State of Montana.
Conflicts can arise between people
who value conservation of the bison and the ranch owners and others who
concerned about the possible risk to nearby cattle from
Brucellosis-infected
bison.
An
inter-agency partnership has developed a management plan
to address this issue, requiring Yellowstone
officials to move the animals off of private property, back onto public
land,
and sometimes capturing bison to prevent them from commingling with
neighboring
livestock.
"Our goal is
to provide the latest snowpack information
to park officials,” said landscape dynamics expert Fred
Watson, principal
investigator of the project and an assistant professor of science and
environmental policy at CSUMB.. “Ecologists try to best
understand how animal
populations respond to the changing conditions of the landscape where
they
live. Snow is a very important factor in the livelihood of all wildlife
species
in the ecosystem, including the Yellowstone
bison population," said Watson.
The release of
captive bison is timed to ensure a higher likelihood
the animals will remain in the park. Knowing when and where the snow
will melt
is key to whether the bison will stay within park boundaries. To better
inform
the management team, park officials use a model of snowpack dynamics
developed
by Watson and his staff to provide the most up-to-date projections on
snowpack
distribution throughout Yellowstone’s
winter
range areas.
The snowpack model provides daily maps of snowpack
depth and density
throughout the Yellowstone
landscape, in
near-real time. It uses data from NASA's Landsat satellite to describe
how the
snowpack is influenced by patterns of vegetation, geothermal features,
and
wind. Daily measurements of precipitation and temperature from USDA
Snowpack
Telemetry system are used to drive the model through time.
"Bison
have one of the
longest migrations of any large mammal in the country. The fact that
they are
moving to low-elevation winter ranges outside the park is actually a
sign of
how successful our restoration efforts have been," said Rick Wallen,
leader of the Park's Bison Ecology and Management team. "The modeling
of
snowpack conditions on winter ranges provides managers a measure of how
quickly
a snow-covered area becomes clear during the spring melting period. We
now have
a much better idea when to release wild bison and expect winter ranges
to
become accessible for the bison during the critical late winter period."
"The
National Park
Service is not a traditional user of NASA information," said Watson.
"But this is a great opportunity to use NASA technology to help the
folks
at Yellowstone.
This project lets them know
what capabilities we have and enables us to try different ways to
incorporate
NASA data and technology into their whole bison management program.
It's a
wonderful chance to aid in wildlife management."
For more
information and images, visit:
http://www.nasa.gov/centers/goddard/news/topstory/2006/yellowstone_bison.html
http://www.nasa.gov/vision/earth/lookingatearth/yellowstone_bison.html
For more
information about NASA's project with the National
Park Service, visit:
http://ynp.csumb.edu
For
more information about bison at Yellowstone
National Park, visit:
http://www.nps.gov/yell/naturescience/bison.htm
Writer: Gretchen Cook-Anderson, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center
##
Contact:
Rob Gutro
NASA
Goddard Space Flight Center
301-286-4044
Robert.J.Gutro@nasa.gov
This text is
derived from:
http://www.nasa.gov/centers/goddard/news/topstory/2006/yellowstone_bison.html
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