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A wood buffalo is another name for a wood bison.
The Wood bison is a distinct subspecies that almost became extinct in the 20th century.
The last reported sighting of wood bison in Alaska was in the early 1900s.
There wasn't a woods bison in that mess.
Animals in the enclosures include grizzly bears, wood bison, and wolves.
As with other bison, the wood bison's population was devastated by hunting and other factors.
The Wood bison was nearly hybridized into extinction.
Starting in 2003, the center has taken part in a program to reintroduce the wood bison back into Alaska after a 100 year absence.
The plains bison also brought new diseases which infected the existing wood bison population.
"I believe these are woods bison.
The Liard River is a crossing area for Nahanni wood bison.
The park was established in 1922 to protect the world's largest herd of free roaming Wood Bison, currently estimated at more than 5,000.
Two bison species are native to North America: plains bison and wood bison.
It is sometimes used in combination with xylazine (Rompun) to tranquilize large mammals such as polar bears and wood bison.
Wood bison were largely over-hunted in the 1800s, and only a few hundred remained in Northern Alberta by early 20th century.
Plains bison are often in the smaller range of sizes, and Wood bison in the larger range.
In western America two distinct kinds of bison had always existed, wood bison that kept to the hills, and plains bison.
The wood bison is the largest land mammal in North America, and is a keystone grazing herbivore from the region.
A herd of hybrid plains bison x wood bison lived wild in the Yukon, Canada.
There was maybe one chance in a hundred that I was wrong and the centerpiece of that grisly feast was a woods bison.
Oil sands companies have reclaimed mined land to use as pasture for wood bison instead of restoring it to the original boreal forest and muskeg.
There, the plains bison and wood bison mingled and created a hybridized species of bison.
Another sub-species of bison, the wood bison (b. b. athabascae) was once Alaska's most common large land mammal.
The American plains bison is no longer listed as endangered, but the wood bison is on the endangered species list in Canada.
In the late 19th century, only 300 wood bison remained worldwide, almost exclusively in Wood Buffalo National Park.
"Growth and Dispersal of an Erupting Large Herbivore Population in Northern Canada: The Mackenzie Wood Bison (Bison Bison Athabascae)."