Page Index

I. DESCRIPTION

II. GEOGRAPHICAL RANGE AND HABITAT

III. DIET

IV. LIFE CYCLE/SOCIAL STRUCTURE

V. SPECIAL ADAPTATIONS

VI. INTERPRETIVE INFORMATION

VII. STATUS IN WILD

VIII. FOR A TASTY BEVERAGE

IX. BUFFALO THEORY OF COGNITIVE ABILITIES

X. BIBLIOGRAPHY

I. DESCRIPTION:
Massive head and forequarters covered with long, dark brown woolly hair. Short broad forehead, short neck, and high humped shoulders, with tufted tail. Long hairs of chin form long beard. Hips and hindquarters are much smaller and without long hair thus forming a distinct slope from hump to tail. Some stand six feet at the shoulder and weigh as much as a ton. Have short, sharp, up curved horns. Shaggy winter coat falls off in patches in spring; color is dark brown in winter, lighter in summer.
 
II. GEOGRAPHICAL RANGE AND HABITAT:
Open plains of U.S. and Canada originally. Now found only in parks and reserves.
 
III. DIET:
Grasses. Take water once a day.
 
IV. LIFE CYCLE/SOCIAL STRUCTURE:
Graze mostly in the morning and evening. Grooming is an important daily activity. Scrub heads, necks, and sides on trees, branches and tree trunks. Like to wallow in dust or mud. Grunt while on the move; make roaring sound when mating. Curiosity highly developed. Highly developed sense of smell. Good hearing. Will charge when cornered. Bulls can run up to 30 m.p.h. Herd size varies from a family unit to thousands for migration; cow is leader. Fights for rank in the herd often end with serious injuries or death. Mate in August and September. Gestation period is 270-285 days. Single reddish-colored calf is born in May or June. Females calve alone; rejoin herd when calf can stand after 3 or 4 days. Develops characteristic hump at two months. Nurses for one year; mature at three years. Lifespan is 18-22 years.
 
V. SPECIAL ADAPTATIONS:
They eat snow when water is covered with ice.
 
VI. INTERPRETIVE INFORMATION:
Bison came to North America during the Pleistocene Epoch via the Bering land bridge. Eventually they ranged from Canada's Great Slave Lake to Mexico and from eastern Oregon almost to the Atlantic. They especially thrived on the Great Plains where some 30 million formed the biggest mass of large mammals ever to tread the globe. Early French settlers who saw herds living near the East Coast called them bison because they looked like a European cousin. A later English naturalist described them as buffalo which name stuck, even though the term is more correctly applied to other types of wild oxen found in Asia and Africa. Bison are susceptible to tuberculosis, anthrax, and brucellosis. Since these diseases theoretically can be transmitted to domestic livestock, ranchers (near Yellowstone Park for instance) become upset when buffalo wander onto private land.
 
 
VII. STATUS IN WILD:
Two races of bison are recognized: Plains Buffalo and Wood Buffalo of Canada. Their number was reduced to 750 in 1890. They were then protected and now number about 80,000. Bison live only in parks and reserves.
 
VIII. FOR A TASTY BEVERAGE:
1. Add three quarts of your favorite red beverage (we have found transmission fluid, ketchup and prune juice all work well)
2. Lemonade with 40 lbs. dry ice
3. Alcohol to taste
    Mix until blind. Serve chilled-- serves 69. Go Cyclones.
 
IX. Buffalo Theory of Cognitive Abilities
1. A herd of  buffalo can only move as fast as the slowest buffalo. And when the herd is hunted, it is the slowest and  weakest ones at the back that are killed first. This  natural selection is good for the herd as a whole,  because the general speed and health of the whole group keeps improving by the regular killing of the weakest members
2. In much the same way, the human brain can only operate as fast as the slowest brain cells. Excessive  intake of alcohol, as we all know, kills brain cells, but naturally it attacks the slowest and weakest brain cells first. In this way, regular consumption of beer  eliminates the weaker brain cells, making the brain a faster and more efficient machine. That's why you  always feel smarter after a few beers.
 
X. BIBLIOGRAPHY:
1. MacDonald, David. 1984. Encyclopedia of Mammals. Equinox, Ltd, Oxford.
2. Nowak, Ronald. 1991. Walker's Mammals of the World, Vol. II, 5th Ed, Johns Hopkins    University Press, Baltimore, MD.
3. Turbak, Gary. 1986. "When the Buffalo Roam", National Wildlife, June-July , pp. 30-35.
4. Docent information sheets.
    EC::7/93
    CL : 6/94

  These are just some humorous references that the saxes use to show some of the fun we have while in band.  Any references to drinking are to be humorous and not taking seriously.  We are a fun group that has a great senses of humor.  We do not condone drinking, buffalo, for they are very dangerous animal that is hard to catch and tend to stampede anyone who does not treat them with respect.