Wood Bison return to the wild in Alaska
#11
He is supplying a link to the site that holds the copyright. Perfectly legal in copyright law. May want to read up a little before you accuse someone of copyright infringement before you get popped with a liable suit.
#12
Here's a video of the actual release on April 3rd. They ran the wood bison across the frozen Innoko River where they officially went wild. According to updates from the Alaska Department of Fish and Game they have adjusted well and have split up into two groups of 50 each. They should start calving soon, and then in a few months the big bulls will be released.
http://youtu.be/5OQQEpDZ-vQ
http://youtu.be/5OQQEpDZ-vQ
#17
The Op's link doesn't seem to work properly. A correct link is:
http://www.usnews.com/news/science/n...elease-planned
US News purchased/licensed the material from AP. Per AP's copyright rules;
The OP quoted part of the article and attempted to provide a valid link to the story at US News. His post would appear to be "for personal, non-commercial use only" as specified in AP's website (see above link). The OP also provided a link to the story in an effort to show the story's origin and not claim it as his own.
For future reference for ALL members, it is wise to put the story or article in quotation marks AND provide a reference link like the OP attempted to do so. By doing both, a member shows that they are obviously not trying to violate any copyright laws and are not attempting to claim credit for somebody else's work.
CalHunter
Moderator
http://www.usnews.com/news/science/n...elease-planned
US News purchased/licensed the material from AP. Per AP's copyright rules;
1.3 For personal, non-commercial use ONLY, You may make a single printed copy of any item of Content on the Site PROVIDED that You do not remove or cause to be removed any copyright, trademark, watermark or other proprietary notices or visual marks or logos from the Content. You may not archive or retain any Content without the express prior written consent of AP to the address shown at Section 10.1 below.
http://ap.org/company/terms-conditions
http://ap.org/company/terms-conditions
For future reference for ALL members, it is wise to put the story or article in quotation marks AND provide a reference link like the OP attempted to do so. By doing both, a member shows that they are obviously not trying to violate any copyright laws and are not attempting to claim credit for somebody else's work.
CalHunter
Moderator
#18
They currently don't have any plans to remove the plains bison and the two subspecies will be kept completely isolated from one another. The plains bison in Alaska came from the National Bison Range before the ingression of cattle genetics so they're considered genetically pure plains bison. If Alaska did ever get rid of them it would probably be many many years from now. The other two areas considered for wood bison herds are the Minto and Yukon Flats which aren't near plains bison herds. Hopefully they do well because there is a lot of wood bison habitat in Alaska. The big hang up was the Endangered Species Act and the fear that critical habitat designation could interfere with mining and oil exploration. Because the wood bison were designated a non-essential experimental population by the USFWS last year they won't have critical habitat. It's estimated that they will reach huntable numbers in 3-10 years, but hunting won't be used to keep their numbers down because the goal is to expand their range and numbers.