
Baby Bison The Bronx Zoo baby bison seen with its mother.
Julie Larsen Maher/WCS
The first “genetically pure” bison produced from a cleansed and
transplanted embryo was born in June, officials at the Bronx Zoo
announced today. Now the zoo can expand its bison herd with only the
purest samples of prairie cows.
Yellowstone National Park has two of the last remaining genetically
pure wild bison herds in the nation, which used to roam the continent
until humans almost wiped them out by the early 20th century. While most
current bison have some cattle genes — a result of interbreeding so
western ranchers could make hardier cattle – Yellowstone’s American
bison are genetically uninterrupted. But they’re difficult to take out
of the park for herd-restoration efforts, because they’re susceptible to
catching and spreading a wide range of diseases.
In this new case, researchers were able to take out a purebred
developing embryo, wash it clean of disease and implant it into a
surrogate commercial buffalo. Unlike the Yellowstone cows, this cow can
go wherever veterinarians want to take it. In this case, it was shipped
off to the Bronx.
Last fall, Colorado State University reproductive physiologist Dr.
Jennifer Barfield and her team took a purebred embryo from a Yellowstone
bison cow that lives at an animal health research center in Fort
Collins, Colo. (Full disclosure: Your correspondent is an alumna of
Colorado State.) Barfield was able to “wash” it so it could not spread
diseases like brucellosis, which causes bison to spontaneously miscarry
their young. It’s not clear exactly how they washed it (we are awaiting
further detail).
After it was deemed clean, Barfield and colleagues implanted it
non-surgically into a healthy female buffalo, one with ancestral cattle
genes. Then the surrogate mother cow was sent the Bronx Zoo, which has
been trying for years to establish a breeding bison herd. The baby male
buffalo was born there June 20, but the Bronx Zoo and CSU just announced
its birth today, after ensuring it was healthy and normal.
“This illustrates that we can engineer breeding of pure-bred bison to
be disease-free despite the diseases that can afflict the bison
population at Yellowstone,” Barfield said. It is also a model for
mitigating diseases in other types of animals, the team said.
While this research is interesting, it raises a question. CSU’s
mascot is the Rocky Mountain bighorn, and our mortal enemy is the
University of Colorado and its Buffaloes. Why is CSU announcing this
special buff right before the Rocky Mountain Showdown? Maybe because
Boulder couldn’t do it?
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