<h2 class="sc"><SPAN name="vi_the_food_of_the_bison" id="vi_the_food_of_the_bison"></SPAN>VI. The Food of the Bison.</h2>
<p>It is obviously impossible to enumerate all the grasses which served the
bison as food on his native heath without presenting a complete list of
all the plants of that order found in a given region; but it is at least
desirable to know which of the grasses of the great pasture region were
his favorite and most common food. It was the nutritious character and
marvelous abundance of his food supply which enabled the bison to exist
in such absolutely countless numbers as characterized his occupancy of
the great plains. The following list comprises the grasses which were
the bison’s principal food, named in the order of their importance: <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_427"></SPAN></span></p>
<p><i>Bouteloua oligostachya</i> (buffalo, grama, or mesquite grass).—This
remarkable grass formed the <i>pièce de résistance</i> of the bison’s bill
of fare in the days when he flourished, and it now comes to us daily in
the form of beef produced of primest quality and in greatest quantity on
what was until recently the great buffalo range. This grass is the most
abundant and widely distributed species to be found in the great pasture
region between the eastern slope of the Rocky Mountains and the
nineteenth degree of west longitude. It is the principal grass of the
plains from Texas to the British Possessions, and even in the latter
territory it is quite conspicuous. To any one but a botanist its first
acquaintance means a surprise. Its name and fame lead the unacquainted
to expect a grass which is tall, rank, and full of “fodder,” like the
“blue joint” (<i>Andropogon provincialis</i>). The grama grass is very short,
the leaves being usually not more than 2 or 3 inches in length and
crowded together at the base of the stems. The flower stalk is about a
foot in height, but on grazed lands are eaten off and but seldom seen.
The leaves are narrow and inclined to curl, and lie close to the ground.
Instead of developing a continuous growth, this grass grows in small,
irregular patches, usually about the size of a man’s hand, with narrow
strips of perfectly bare ground between them. The grass curls closely
upon the ground, in a woolly carpet or cushion, greatly resembling a
layer of Florida moss. Even in spring-time it never shows more color
than a tint of palest green, and the landscape which is dependent upon
this grass for color is never more than “a gray and melancholy waste.”
Unlike the soft, juicy, and succulent grasses of the well-watered
portions of the United States, the tiny leaves of the grama grass are
hard, stiff, and dry. I have often noticed that in grazing neither
cattle nor horses are able to bite off the blades, but instead each leaf
is pulled out of the tuft, seemingly by its root.</p>
<p>Notwithstanding its dry and uninviting appearance, this grass is highly
nutritious, and its fat-producing qualities are unexcelled. The heat of
summer dries it up effectually without destroying its nutritive
elements, and it becomes for the remainder of the year excellent hay,
cured on its own roots. It affords good grazing all the year round, save
in winter, when it is covered with snow, and even then, if the snow is
not too deep, the buffaloes, cattle, and horses paw down through it to
reach the grass, or else repair to wind-swept ridges and hill-tops,
where the snow has been blown off and left the grass partly exposed.
Stock prefer it to all the other grasses of the plains.</p>
<p>On bottom-lands, where moisture is abundant, this grass develops much
more luxuriantly, growing in a close mass, and often to a height of a
foot or more, if not grazed down, when it is cut for hay, and sometimes
yields 1½ tons to the acre. In Montana and the north it is generally
known as “buffalo-grass,” a name to which it would seem to be fully
entitled, notwithstanding the fact that this name is also applied, and
quite generally, to another species, the next to be noticed.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_428"></SPAN></span></p>
<p><i>Buchloë dactyloides</i> (Southern buffalo-grass).—This species is next
in value and extent of distribution to the grama grass. It also is found
all over the great plains south of Nebraska and southern Wyoming, but
not further north, although in many localities it occurs so sparsely as
to be of little account. A single bunch of it very greatly resembles
<i>Bouteloua oligostachya</i>, but its general growth is very different. It
is very short, its general mass seldom rising more than 3 inches above
the ground. It grows in extensive patches, and spreads by means of
stolons, which sometimes are 2 feet in length, with joints every 3 or 4
inches. Owing to its southern distribution this might well be named the
Southern buffalo grass, to distinguish it from the two other species of
higher latitudes, to which the name “buffalo” has been fastened forever.</p>
<p><i>Stipa spartea</i> (Northern buffalo-grass; wild oat).—This grass is found
in southern Manitoba, westwardly across the plains to the Rocky
Mountains, and southward as far as Montana, where it is common in many
localities. On what was once the buffalo range of the British
Possessions this rank grass formed the bulk of the winter pasturage, and
in that region is quite as famous as our grama grass. An allied species
(<i>Stipa viridula</i>, bunch-grass) is “widely diffused over our Rocky
Mountain region, extending to California and British America, and
furnishing a considerable part of the wild forage of the region” <i>Stipa
spartea</i> bears an ill name among stockmen on account of the fact that at
the base of each seed is a very hard and sharp-pointed callus, which
under certain circumstances (so it is said) lodges in the cheeks of
domestic animals that feed upon this grass when it is dry, and which
cause much trouble. But the buffalo, like the wild horse and half-wild
range cattle, evidently escaped this annoyance. This grass is one of the
common species over a wide area of the northern plains, and is always
found on soil which is comparatively dry. In Dakota, Minnesota, and
northwest Iowa it forms a considerable portion of the upland prairie
hay.</p>
<p>Of the remaining grasses it is practically impossible to single out any
one as being specially entitled to fourth place in this list. There are
several species which flourish in different localities, and in many
respects appear to be of about equal importance as food for stock. Of
these the following are the most noteworthy:</p>
<p><i>Aristida purpurea</i> (Western beard-grass; purple “bunch-grass” of
Montana).—On the high, rolling prairies of the Missouri-Yellowstone
divide this grass is very abundant. It grows in little solitary bunches,
about 6 inches high, scattered through the curly buffalo-grass
(<i>Bouteloua oligostachya</i>). Under more favorable conditions it grows to
a height of 12 to 18 inches. It is one of the prettiest grasses of that
region, and in the fall and winter its purplish color makes it quite
noticeable. The Montana stockmen consider it one of the most valuable
grasses of that region for stock of all kinds. Mr. C. M. Jacobs assured
me that the <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_429"></SPAN></span>buffalo used to be very fond of this grass, and that
“wherever this grass grew in abundance there were the best
hunting-grounds for the bison.” It appears that <i>Aristida purpurea</i> is
not sufficiently abundant elsewhere in the Northwest to make it an
important food for stock; but Dr. Vesey declares that it is “abundant on
the plains of Kansas, New Mexico, and Texas.”</p>
<p><i>Kœleria cristata.</i>—Very generally distributed from Texas and New
Mexico to the British Possessions; sand hills and arid soils; mountains,
up to 8,000 feet.</p>
<p><i>Poa tenuifolia</i> (blue-grass of the plains and mountains).—A valuable
“bunch-grass,” widely distributed throughout the great pasture region;
grows in all sorts of soils and situations; common in the Yellowstone
Park.</p>
<p><i>Festuca scabrella</i> (bunch-grass).—One of the most valuable grasses of
Montana and the Northwest generally; often called the “great
bunch-grass.” It furnishes excellent food for horses and cattle, and is
so tall it is cut in large quantities for hay. This is the prevailing
species on the foot-hills and mountains generally, up to an altitude of
7,000 feet, where it is succeeded by <i>Festuca ovina</i>.</p>
<p><i>Andropogon provincialis</i> (blue stem).—An important species, extending
from eastern Kansas and Nebraska to the foot-hills of the Rocky
Mountains, and from Northern Texas to the Saskatchewan; common in
Montana on alkali flats and bottom lands generally. This and the
preceding species were of great value to the buffalo in winter, when the
shorter grasses were covered with snow.</p>
<p><i>Andropogon scoparius</i> (bunch grass; broom sedge; wood-grass).—Similar
to the preceding in distribution and value, but not nearly so tall.</p>
<p>None of the buffalo grasses are found in the mountains. In the mountain
regions which have been visited by the buffalo and in the Yellowstone
Park, where to-day the only herd remaining in a state of nature is to be
found (though not by the man with a gun), the following are the grasses
which form all but a small proportion of the ruminant food: <i>Kœleria
cristata</i>; <i>Poa tenuifolia</i> (Western blue-grass); <i>Stipa viridula</i>
(feather-grass); <i>Stipa comata</i>; <i>Agropyrum divergens</i>; <i>Agropyrum
caninum</i>.</p>
<p>When pressed by hunger, the buffalo used to browse on certain species of
sage-brush, particularly <i>Atriplex canescens</i> of the Southwest. But he
was discriminating in the matter of diet, and as far as can be
ascertained he was never known to eat the famous and much-dreaded “loco”
weed (<i>Astragalus molissimus</i>), which to ruminant animals is a veritable
drug of madness. Domestic cattle and horses often eat this plant; where
it is abundant, and become demented in consequence.</p>
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