Abstract
Ecosystem managers often use the early historic condition of the fauna in an area as the model for restoration or management. West of the Pecos River in the American Southwest, present-day abundances and distributional ranges of bison and American elk exceed those reported in early historic times. I evaluate several potential causes for the historic scarcity of these animals—inadequate forage, insufficient water, nonhuman predation, disease, and hunting by late-prehistoric humans. Archaeological and ecological evidence suggest that restricted availability of water coupled with hunting by late-prehistoric peoples probably were the most important causes. Perennial water is more widely distributed now than previously, mainly because of water well and water catchment construction. Proliferation of agriculture-based human economies in the region from AD 0–1500 led to rapid population growth of aboriginal peoples, with resulting increased harvests of resources. The likelihood that late-prehistoric humans severely depleted the abundances of large mammals indicates a need to reevaluate the exclusive use of early-historic conditions as the basis for setting goals for ecosystem management. Implications of reintroducing large herbivores to ecosystems are discussed.
Similar content being viewed by others
Literature Cited
Akins, N. J. 1984. Temporal variation in faunal assemblages from Chaco Canyon. Pages 225–240in W. J. Judge and J. D. Schelberg (eds.), Recent research on Chaco prehistory. US National Park Service, Chaco Center Report 8. Albuquerque, New Mexico, 279 pp.
Anyon, R., and S. A. LeBlanc. 1984. The Galaz ruin: A prehistoric Mimbres village in southwestern New Mexico. Maxwell Museum of Anthropology and University of New Mexico Press, Albuquerque, 612 pp.
Arizona Game and Fish Department. 1989. Report to the Big Game Ranching Committee. Unpublished report, 15 pp.
Arthur, G. W. 1978. A re-analysis of the early historic plains Indian bison drives.Plains Anthropologist, Memoir 14:236–242.
Bailey, V. 1931. Mammals of New Mexico. US Bureau of Biological Survey, North American Fauna No. 53, 412 pp.
Berger, J. 1990. Persistence of different-sized populations: an empirical assessment of rapid extinctions in bighorn sheep.Conservation Biology 4:91–98.
Bergerud, A. T. 1983. The natural population control of caribou. Pages 14–16in F. L. Bunnell, D. S. Eastman, and J. M. Reed (eds.), Symposium on natural regulation of wildlife populations. University of Idaho Forest, Wildlife, and Range Experiment Station, Moscow, 223 pp.
Bergerud, A. T., and J. P. Elliot. 1986. Dynamics of caribou and wolves in northern British Columbia.Canadian Journal of Zoology 64:1515–1529.
Betancourt, J. L., and T. R. Van Devender. 1981. Holocene vegetation in Chaco Canyon, New Mexico.Science 214:656–658.
Bigelow, J. M. 1856. General description of the botanical character of the country.In Reports of explorations and surveys to ascertain the most practicable and economical route for a railroad from the Mississippi River to the Pacific Ocean. 33rd Congress, 2nd Session, House Executive Document No. 91.
Botkin, D. B., J. M. Mellilo, and L. S.-Y. Wu. 1981. How ecosystem processes are linked to large mammal population dynamics. Pages 373–387in C. W. Fowler and T. D. Smith (eds.), Dynamics of large mammal populations. John Wiley & Sons, New York, 477 pp.
Boyd, R. J. 1978. American elk. Pages 11–29in J. L. Schmidt and D. L. Gilbert (eds.), Big game of North America: Ecology and management. Stackpole Books, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, 494 pp.
Britt, T. L. 1982. Elk status in Arizona. Pages 10–12in T. L. Britt and D. P. Theobold (eds.), Proceedings of the western states elk workshop, 22–24 February 1982. Arizona Game & Fish Department, Flagstaff, 166 pp.
Brown, D. E. 1983. The wolf in the Southwest: The making of an endangered species. University of Arizona Press, Tucson, 195 pp.
Brown, D. E. 1985. The grizzly in the Southwest: Documentary of an extinction. University of Oklahoma Press, Norman, 274 pp.
Brown, D. E., N. B. Carmony, and R. M. Turner. 1978. Drainage map of Arizona, showing perennial streams and some important wetlands. Arizona Game & Fish Department, Phoenix.
Bryson, R. A. 1974. A perspective on climatic change.Science 184:753–784.
Cahalane, V. H. 1939. Mammals of the Chiricahua Mountains, Arizona.Journal of Mammalogy 20:418–440.
Campbell, B. 1983. Human ecology. Aldine Publishing, New York, 198 pp.
Caughley, G., G. C. Grigg, J. Caughley, and G. J. E. Hill. 1980. Does dingo predation control the densities of kangaroos and emus?Australian Wildlife Review 7:1–12.
Colton, H. S. 1960. Black sand: prehistory in northern Arizona. University of New Mexico Press, Albuquerque, 132 pp.
Cooperrider, A. Y. 1982. Forage allocation for elk and cattle. Pages 142–149in T. L. Britt and D. P. Theobold (eds.), Proceedings of the western states elk workshop, 22–24 February 1982. Arizona Game & Fish Department, Phoenix, 166 pp.
Coughenour, M. B. 1991. Spatial components of plant-herbivore interactions in pastoral, ranching, and native ungulate ecosystems.Journal of Range Management 44:530–542.
Cowan, I. McT. 1947. The timber wolf in the Rocky Mountain national parks of Canada.Canadian Journal of Research 25:139–174.
Dasmann, R. F. 1964. Wildlife biology. John Wiley & Sons, New York, 231 pp.
Davis, G. P., Jr. 1982. Man and wildlife in Arizona: the American exploration period, 1824–1865. N. B. Carmony and D. E. Brown (eds.), Arizona Game & Fish Department, Federal Aid to Wildlife W-53-R, 232 pp.
Day, G. I. Undated. Javelina research and management in Arizona. Arizona Game and Fish Department, Phoenix, 122 pp.
Diamond, J. 1987. Reflections on goals and on the relationship between theory and practice. Pages 329–336in W. R. Jordan III, M. E. Gilpin, and J. D. Aber (eds.), Restoration ecology: A synthetic approach to ecological research. Cambridge University Press, New York, 342 pp.
Dick, H. W. 1965. Bat cave. School of American Research Monograph No. 27, Santa Fe, New Mexico, 114 pp.
Driver, H. E. 1961. Indians of North America. The University of Chicago Press, Chicago, Illinois, 666 pp.
Dye, T., and D. W. Steadman. 1990. Polynesian ancestors and their animal world.American Scientist 78:207–215.
Eltringham, S. K. 1990. Wildlife carrying capacities in relation to human settlement.Koedoe 33(2):87–97.
Flores, D. 1991. Bison ecology and bison diplomacy: The southern plains from 1800 to 1850.Journal of American History 78:465–485.
Garretson, M. S. 1971. A short history of the American bison. Books for Libraries Press, Freeport, New York, 66 pp.
Gates, G. H. 1967. Elk. Pages 31–41in New Mexico wildlife management. New Mexico Department of Game & Fish, Santa Fe, 250 pp.
Gladwin, H. S., E. W. Haury, E. B. Sayles, and N. Gladwin. 1938. Excavations at Snaketown: Material culture. University of Arizona Press, Tucson, 305 pp.
Goodwin, G. 1969. The social organization of the western Apache. University of Arizona Press, Tucson, 701 pp.
Guthrie, R. D. 1980. Bison and man in North America.Canadian Journal of Anthropology 1:55–73.
Hall, E. R. 1981. The mammals of North America. John Wiley & Sons. New York, 1175 pp.
Hastings, J. R., and R. M. Turner. 1965. The changing mile. University of Arizona Press, Tucson, 317 pp.
Hawkes, N. 1992. Myth of the noble savage.World 57:36–38.
Hibler, C. P., and J. L. Adcock. 1971. Elaeophorosis. Pages 263–278in J. W. Davis and R. C. Anderson (eds.), Parasitic diseases of wild mammals. Iowa State University Press, Ames.
Hickerson, H. 1965. The Virginia deer and intertribal buffer zones in the upper Mississippi Valley. Pages 43–65in A. Leeds and A. Vayda (eds.), Man, culture, and animals: The role of animals in human ecological adjustments. American Associaiton for the Advancement of Science Publication 78. Washington, DC, 304 pp.
Humphrey, R. R. 1958. The desert grassland: A history of vegetational change and an analysis of causes.Botanical Review 24(4):193–252.
Johnson, P. C. 1981. Mammalian remains from Las Colinas. Pages 269–289in L. C. Hammack and A. P. Sullivan (eds.) The 1968 excavations at Mound B, Las Colinas Ruins group, Phoenix, Arizona. Report to Arizona Department of Transportation by Arizona State Museum, University of Arizona, Tucson, 388 pp.
Johnson, T. N., Jr., and J. W. Elson. 1979. Sixty years of change on a central Arizona grassland-juniper ecotone. USDA Science and Education Administration, Agricultural Reviews and Manuals, Western Series No. 7, 28 pp.
Kay, C. 1994. Aboriginal overkill: The role of Native Americans in structuring western ecosystems.Human Nature 5(4):359–398.
Kristner, T. P., K. R. Greer, D. E. Worley, and O. A. Brunetti. 1982. Diseases and parasites. Pages 181–217in J. W. Thomas and D. E. Toweill (eds.), Elk of North America: Ecology and management. Stackpole Books, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, 698 pp.
Kunity, S. J., and R. C. Euler. 1972. Aspects of southwestern paleoepidemiology. Prescott College Anthropology Report 2, Prescott, Arizona, 55 pp.
Lamb, S. H. 1967. Restoration of buffalo. Pages 210–211in New Mexico wildlife management. New Mexico Department of Game & Fish, Santa Fe, 250 pp.
Lambert, M. F., and S. L. Rogers. 1954. Paa-ko, archaeological chronical of an Indian village in north central New Mexico. School of American Research Monograph 19, Santa Fe, New Mexico, 193 pp.
Lee, R. 1993. History and management of Arizona's bison. Pages 181–187in R. E. Walker (compiler), Proceedings of the North American public bison herds symposium. 27–29 July 1993, LaCrosse, Wisconsin.
Lowe, C. H., and D. E. Brown. 1982. Introduction. Pages 8–16in D. E. Brown (ed.), Biotic communities of the American Southwest—United States and Mexico.Desert Plants 4(1–4):special issue.
Lyon, M. W., Jr. 1907. Mammal remains from two prehistoric village sites in New Mexico and Arizona.US National Museum Proceedings 31:647–649.
Mackie, R. J. 1970. Range ecology and relations of mule deer, elk, and cattle in the Missouri River breaks, Montana.Wildlife Monographs 20:79 pp.
Martin, C. 1978. Keepers of the game: Indian-animal relationships and the fur trade. University of California Press, Berkeley, 226 pp.
Martin, P. S. 1984. Prehistoric overkill: The global model. Pages 354–403in P. S. Martin and R. G. Klein (eds.), Quaternary extinctions. University of Arizona Press, Tucson, 892 pp.
Martin, P. S., and R. Plog. 1973. The archaeology of Arizona: a study of the Southwest region. Doubleday Natural History Press, Garden City, New York, 422 pp.
McCabe, R. E. 1982. Elk and Indians: Historical values and perspectives. Pages 61–124in J. W. Thomas and D. E. Toweill (eds.) Elk of North America: Ecology and management. Stackpole Books, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, 698 pp.
McCabe, R. E., and T. R. McCabe. 1983. Of slings and arrows: an historical perspective. Pages 19–72in L. K. Halls (ed.), White-tailed deer: Ecology and management. Stackpole Books, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, 857 pp.
McCorquodale, S. M. 1993. Winter foraging behavior of elk in the shrub-steppe of Washington.Journal of Wildlife Management 57:881–890.
McCorquodale, S. M., and R. F. DiGiacomo. 1985. The role of wild North American ungulates in the epidemiology of bovine brucellosis: A review.Journal of Wildlife Diseases 21:351–357.
McDonald, J. N. 1981. North American bison: Their classification and evolution. University of California Press, Berkeley, 316 pp.
Meagher, M. M. 1978. Bison. Pages 123–133in J. L. Scmidt and D. L. Gilbert (eds.), Big game of North America. Stackpole Books, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, 494 pp.
Meagher, M. M., and M. E. Meyer. 1994. On the origin of brucellosis in bison of Yellowstone National Park: A review.Conservation Biology 8:645–653.
Mearns, E. A. 1907. Mammals of the Mexican boundary of the United States. US National Museum Bulletin 56. US Government Printing Office, Washington, DC, 530 pp.
Mech, L. D. 1966. The wolves of Isle Royale. US National Park Service Fauna Series No. 7. 210 pp.
Mech, L. D. 1970. The wolf: The ecology and behavior of an endangered species. The Natural History Press, Garden City, New York, 384 p.p.
Mech, L. D. 1977. Wolf-pack buffer zones as prey reservoirs.Science 198:320–321.
Mech, L. D. 1984. Predators and predation. Pages 189–200in L. K. Halls (ed.), White-tailed deer: Ecology and management. Stackpole Books, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, 857 pp.
Mills, L. C., M. E. Soule, and D. F. Doak. 1993. The keystonespecies concept in ecology and conservation.BioScience 43:219–224.
Nelson, J. R. 1982. Relationships of elk and other large herbivores. Pages 415–441in J. W. Thomas and D. E. Toweill (eds.), Elk of North America: ecology and management. Stackpole Books, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, 698 pp.
Nelson, J. R., and T. A. Leege. 1982. Nutritional requirements and food habits. Pages 323–367in J. W. Thomas and D. E. Toweill (eds.) Elk of North America: Ecology and management. Stackpole Books, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, 698 pp.
Opler, M. E. 1965. An Apache life-way. Cooper Square Publishers, New York.
Opler, M. E. (ed.). 1973. Grenville Goodwin among the western Apache: Letters from the field. University of Arizona Press, Tucson, 103 pp.
Owen-Smith, N. 1987. Pleistocene extinctions: the pivotal role of megaherbivores.Paleobiology 13(3):351–362.
Peden, D. G., G. M. van Dyne, R. W. Rice, and R. M. Hansen. 1974. The trophic ecology ofBison bison L. on shortgrass plains.Journal of Applied Ecology 11:489–499.
Plumb, G. E., and J. L. Dodd. 1993. Foraging ecology of bison and cattle on a mixed prairie: Implications for natural area management.Ecological Applications 3:631–643.
Redford, K. H. 1992. The empty forest.BioScience 42(6):412–422.
Reed, E. K. 1955. Bison beyond the Pecos.Texas Journal of Science 7:132–134.
Rickman, G. L. 1982. Elk management in New Mexico. Pages 28–29in T. L. Britt and D. P. Theobold (eds.), Proceedings of the western states elk workshop, 22–24 February 1982. Arizona Game & Fish Department, Flagstaff, 166 pp.
Roe, F. G. 1970. The North American buffalo: A critical study of the species in its wild state, 2nd ed. University of Toronto Press, Toronto, Canada, 991 pp.
Rostlund, E. 1960. The geographic range of the historic bison in the Southeast.Annals of the Association of American Geographers 50(4):395–407.
Russell, K. R. 1978. Mountain lion. Pages 207–224in J. L. Schmidt and D. L. Gilbert (eds.), Big game of North America. Stackpole Books, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, 494 pp.
Ruyle, G. B., and B. A. Roundy. 1990. Effects of vegetation manipulation on wildlife on semidesert rangelands. Pages 230–238in P. R. Krausman and N. S. Smith (eds.) Managing wildlife in the Southwest. Arizona Chapter of the Wildlife Society, Phoenix, 262 pp.
Ryder, R. A. 1980. Effects of grazing on bird habitats. Pages 51–66in R. M. DeGraff (coord.), Management of western forests and grasslands for nongame birds. US Forest Service General Technical Report INT-86, 535 pp.
Samuels, M. L., and J. L. Betancourt. 1982. Modeling the long-term effects of fuelwood harvests on pinyon-juniper woodlands.Environmenetal Management 6:505–515.
Seip, D. R. 1991. Predation and caribou populations.Rangifer, Special Issue No. 7:46–52.
Skovlin, J. M. 1982. Habitat requirements and evaluations. Pages 369–413in J. W. Thomas and D. E. Toweill (eds.), Elk of North America: Ecology and management. Stackpole Books, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, 698 pp.
Speth, J. D., and W. J. Parry. 1980. Late prehistoric bison procurement in southeastern New Mexico: The 1978 season at the Garnsey site (LA-18399). University of Michigan Museum of Anthropology Technical Report 12. Ann Arbor, 369 pp.
Stein, W. T. 1963. Mammal remains from archaeological sites in the Point of Pines region, Arizona.American Antiquity 29(2):213–220.
Stoddart, L. A., and A. D. Smith. 1955. Range management. McGraw-Hill, New York, 433 pp.
Swift, L. W. 1945. A partial history of the elk herds of Colorado.Journal of Mammalogy 26:114–119.
Szaro, R. C. 1980. Factors influencing bird populations in southwestern riparian forests. Pages 403–418in R. M. DeGraff (coord.), Management of western forests and grasslands for nongame birds. US Forest Service General Technical Report INT-86, 535 pp.
Szuter, C. R. 1991. Hunting by prehistoric horticulturalists in the American Southwest. Garland Publishers, New York, 454 pp.
Taber, R. D., K. Raedeke, and D. A. McCaughran. 1982. Population characteristics. Pages 279–298in J. W. Thomas and D. E. Toweill (eds.) Elk of North America: Ecology and management. Stackpole Books, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, 698 pp.
Tyler, H. A. 1975. Pueblo animals and myths. University of Oklahoma Press, Norman, 274 pp.
US Forest Service. 1976. Coconino National Forest, Arizona (map, scale 1:105, 604).
US Forest Service. 1977. Apache-Sitgreaves national forests, Arizona (map, scale 1:126, 720).
Van Vuren, D., and M. P. Bray. 1986. Population dynamics of bison in the Henry Mountains, Utah.Journal of Mammalogy 67:503–511.
Wagner, F. H. 1978. Livestock grazing and the livestock industry. Pages 121–145in H. P. Brokaw (ed.), Wildlife and America. US Council on Environmental Quality, Washington, DC, 532 pp.
Wagner, F. H., and L. C. Stoddart. 1972. Influence of coyote predation on black-tailed jackrabbit populations in Utah.Journal of Wildlife Management 36:329–342.
Wagoner, J. J. 1952. History of the cattle industry in southern Arizona, 1540–1940. University of Arizona Social Science Bulletin 20, Tucson.
Wallmo, O. C. 1978. Mule and blacktailed deer. Pages 31–41in J. L. Schmidt and D. L. Gilbert (eds.), Big game of North America. Stackpole Books, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, 494 pp.
Weber, D. J. 1968. The Taos trappers: The fur trade in the far Southwest, 1540–1846. University of Oklahoma Press, Norman, 263 pp.
White, R. 1983. The roots of dependency: Subsistence, environment, and social change among the Choctaws, Pawnees, and Navajos. University of Nebraska Press, Lincoln, 433 pp.
Williams, P. R. 1985. Excavations at Oak Creek Valley Pueblo. MA thesis. Northern Arizona University, Flagstaff.
Wills, W. H. 1988. Early prehistoric agriculture in the American Southwest. School of American Research Press, Santa Fe, New Mexico, 184 pp.
Wills, W. H. 1989. Patterns of prehistoric food production in west-central New Mexico.Journal of Anthropological Research 45(1):139–157.
Yoakum, J. D. 1978. Pronghorn. Pages 103–121in J. L. Schmidt and D. L. Gilbert (eds.), Big game of North America. Stackpole Books, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, 494 pp.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Rights and permissions
About this article
Cite this article
Truett, J. Bison and elk in the American Southwest: In search of the pristine. Environmental Management 20, 195–206 (1996). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01204004
Issue Date:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01204004