White
bison born near Flagstaff
Keith Davis/Special for The Arizona Republic
This white bison calf, born Saturday at Spirit Mountain Ranch near
Flagstaff, is very rare.
'1-in-10 million' occurrence is expected to draw a crowd
Bob Golfen
The Arizona Republic
May. 24, 2004 12:00 AM
The owners of a small bison herd near Flagstaff were surprised Saturday
morning to find one of their rare white buffaloes had given birth to
something even rarer: a white calf.
A white calf is a one-in-10 million occurrence, said Keith Davis, a
spokesman for Spirit Mountain Ranch.
"This is so rare specifically because she was born white,"
Davis said. "The others were born red (like normal buffaloes) and
turned white."
The birth of a white bison is meaningful for many Native American tribes,
especially Plains Indians such as the Lakota, who consider it a symbol
of rebirth when the world's people are in troubled times.
"The white buffalo is such a phenomenon because they are so rare,"
said Dena Riley, who owns the ranch with her husband, Jim.
None of her buffaloes is albino but rather a mutation of the usual fur
color of dark brown to black, Riley said. Of 11 bison on the ranch,
four are white, not including the newborn.
The animals on the ranch are also pure bison, proven by DNA testing
at a California lab, she added, and not a mix of bison and cattle, known
as beefalo. That mixture more often results in white offspring, she
said.
The ranch was moved onto its 5-acre site near the San Francisco Peaks
in December 2001, Riley said, and has had visitors from around the globe
to see white bison.
For more info go to this website:
http://www.pdhomes.net/html/creations/Pages/8/White_Buffalo_Born.html
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