Bison

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There is no audio track since this is b-roll video. For descriptions of the visuals, view the audio described version.

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Duration:
1 minute, 36 seconds

Bison are only found on the North Rim of Grand Canyon National Park. They are wild animals and are unpredictable. We recommend maintaining a distance of 100 feet (30 meters) from them, and when they are within 100 feet of the road, it is recommended to view them from inside your vehicle. Please use established gravel or paved pull-outs to park vehicles completely off the roadway (all wheels right of the white line). Do not walk or park in the road. B-roll video by L/Cisneros, July 2022.

 
A map of the United States showing lines to various American Indian Tribes that have received bison from Grand Canyon National Park
Destinations of Bison transferred to Native American Tribes from Grand Canyon National Park.

NPS Map/ C. Talley

Management of the Kaibab Plateau Bison Herd
The present day Kaibab Plateau Bison Herd is one of the few unfenced wild herds in the U.S., and as such, wanders across multiple jurisdictions. The herd is co-managed by Grand Canyon National Park, Arizona Game & Fish, and the Kaibab National Forest. To learn more about the Kaibab Plateau Bison Herd visit the Bison at Grand Canyon: Kaibab Plateau Herd Information
page.

By 2025, the National Park Service will reduce the size of the overpopulated Kaibab Plateau bison herd. Learn more about the effects of bison overpopulation on the Bison Effects Research and Monitoring at Grand Canyon National Park page. The Environmental Assessment, Finding of No Significant Impact and other documents can be found on the NPS Planning Environment and Public Comment (PEPC) website.

Herd Reduction to Date (September 2024)
Since reduction efforts began in 2018, park staff have removed 306 bison from the North Rim with 282 transferred to eight different American Indian tribes through the InterTribal Buffalo Council (see map).

Lethal removal of bison with public volunteers will not occur in 2024.
Based on the success of bison reduction efforts, lethal removal operations will not be necessary in 2024 to reach the park’s stated reduction goal. Park managers will focus on live capture and transfer operations. Bison selected for removal will be transferred to the InterTribal Buffalo Council for distribution to American Indian tribes who request live bison to augment their own herds.

If you have any specific questions related to bison management at Grand Canyon, please e-mail us.

 
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Duration:
9 minutes, 39 seconds

This video presents an overview of bison management on the North Rim of Grand Canyon National Park. By 2025, the National Park Service will reduce the size of the overpopulated Kaibab Plateau bison herd through live capture and transfer to American Indian Tribes and lethal removal with Skilled Volunteers. Grand Canyon National Park is reducing the size to under 200 in order to protect park resources—including vegetation, water, and sacred archeologic sites—from the impacts of the bison.

Learn more:

 

Kaibab Plateau Herd in Grand Canyon

 

Grand Canyon National Park News Releases

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      Grand Canyon, AZ 86023

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