(Press-News.org) Yellowstone’s roaming bison herds enhance nutrient cycles and boost ecosystem health at landscape scales, according to a new study. The findings, which challenge conventional grazing wisdom, suggest that restoring large-scale migrations could unlock the species’ full ecological power. Historically, North America supported tens of millions of bison whose seasonal migrations transformed the continent’s vast grassland ecosystems. Today, these once massive herds of wild, free roaming bison are no more; only about 400,000 bison remain, and almost all exist in small managed herds on private land or within parks and reserves. Although research suggests that bison play a powerful role in shaping ecosystems by diversifying habitats, influencing plant communities, and driving processes like nutrient cycling and productivity, the broader ecological impacts of large, migrating herds remain poorly understood because modern bison are mostly confined to limited areas. The restoration of bison migrations in the northern Yellowstone ecosystem, however, provides a rare natural laboratory for understanding how large herbivores shape ecosystems at the landscape scale.
Between 2015 and 2022, Chris Geremia and colleagues tracked bison grazing dynamics across 16 sites representing the animal’s three main habitats, and measured their impact on carbon and nitrogen dynamics, plant communities, and soil microbiology. Geremia et al. found that bison stabilized plant production while accelerating nitrogen cycling, boosting aboveground nitrogen and improving landscape nutritional quality, particularly in wet, nutrient-rich areas that hosted bison densities and grazing at levels higher than typically recommended. Soil microbe density and nitrogen content in soils and plants also increased in grazed areas. According to the authors, the findings show that the ecological power of large, migrating herbivores lies not only in their size but in their numbers, density, and freedom to migrate. “To move forward with conserving migratory herbivores and grassland ecosystems, we must embrace landscape-scale heterogeneity – not at the scale of individual ranches or pastures, but at sizes that allow for thousands of migrating large herbivores to move freely across the landscape,” write Geremia et al. “Our findings emphasize that ecosystems with large native herbivores, such as bison, can function successfully in today’s world.”
END
Yellowstone’s free roaming bison drive grassland resilience
Summary author: Walter Beckwith
2025-08-28
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Turbulent flow in heavily polluted Tijuana River drives regional air quality risks
2025-08-28
The Tijuana River’s polluted waters don’t just contaminate Southern California’s beaches – they also release toxic gases and aerosols that travel far beyond the riverbanks, threatening the health of nearby communities, according to a new study. The Tijuana River Valley, straddling the US-Mexico border, faces a severe and worsening pollution crisis as untreated sewage, industrial waste, and toxic runoff flow into the Pacific, causing prolonged beach closures and persistent environmental health risks. While most concern ...
Revealed: Genetic shifts that helped tame horses and made them rideable
2025-08-28
A study of ancient horse genomes reveals the genetic changes that contributed to making the animals tame, strong, and rideable by humans thousands of years ago. The domestication of horses, which occurred at least 4,500 years ago, had a transformative effect on the evolution of human society, altering mobility, farming, and warfare. Across much of the world, horses served as a primary mode of human transportation until the rise of the combustion engine in the late 19th century. However, despite ...
Mars’ mantle is a preserved relic of its ancient past, seismic data reveals
2025-08-28
Locked beneath a single-plate crust, Mars’ mantle holds a frozen record of the red planet’s primordial past, according to a new study of Martian seismic data collected by NASA’s InSight mission. The findings reveal a highly heterogenous and disordered mantle, born from ancient impacts and chaotic convection in the planet’s early history. “Whereas Earth’s early geological records remain elusive, the identification of preserved ancient mantle heterogeneity on Mars offers an unprecedented window into the geological history and ...
Variation inside and out: cell types in fruit fly metamorphosis
2025-08-28
Osaka, Japan – All living beings, big or small, are formed through the hard work of many different cells. To keep the body ready for any challenge, cells need to be dynamic. Often, this means the same types of cell – for example, red blood cells – look and function differently to one another to work together en masse. While researchers know that these varied, or micro-heterogenous, cells exist in multiple bodily systems, the benefits of being heterogenous for how systems function are not yet known.
However, in a study due to be published in PLOS Computational Biology, researchers from The University of Osaka, The University of ...
Mount Sinai researchers use AI and lab tests to predict genetic disease risk
2025-08-28
New York, NY [August 28, 2025]—When genetic testing reveals a rare DNA mutation, doctors and patients are frequently left in the dark about what it actually means. Now, researchers at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai have developed a powerful new way to determine whether a patient with a mutation is likely to actually develop disease, a concept known in genetics as penetrance.
The team set out to solve this problem using artificial intelligence (AI) and routine lab tests like cholesterol, blood counts, and kidney function. Details of the findings were reported ...
When bison are room to roam, they reawaken the Yellowstone ecosystem
2025-08-28
On Aug. 28, scientists from Washington and Lee University, the National Park Service and the University of Wyoming published research in Science magazine shedding new light on the value of bison recovery efforts in Yellowstone National Park.
Bill Hamilton, John T. Perry Jr. Professor in Research Science at Washington and Lee University, and Chris Geremia, a researcher with the National Park Service at Yellowstone, served as co-first authors, with co-author Jerod Merkle, associate professor and Knobloch Professor in Migration Ecology and Conservation at the University of Wyoming.
While momentum is building to restore bison ...
Mars’s interior more like Rocky Road than Millionaire’s Shortbread, scientists find
2025-08-28
Mars’s interior more like Rocky Road than Millionaire’s Shortbread, scientists find
New research published in the journal Science reveals the Red Planet’s mantle preserves a record of its violent beginnings.
The inside of Mars isn’t smooth and uniform like familiar textbook illustrations. Instead, new research reveals it’s chunky - more like a Rocky Road brownie than a neat slice of Millionaire’s Shortbread.
We often picture rocky planets like Earth and Mars as having smooth, layered interiors - with crust, mantle, and core stacked like the biscuit base, caramel middle, and chocolate topping of a millionaire’s shortbread. But the ...
Tijuana River’s toxic water pollutes the air
2025-08-28
For decades, the Tijuana River has carried millions of gallons of untreated sewage and industrial waste across the U.S.-Mexico border. The river passes through San Diego’s South Bay region before emptying into the ocean, recently leading to more than 1,300 consecutive days of beach closures and water quality concerns. Residents of South Bay communities have long voiced concerns about the foul smells emanating from the river, reporting health issues including eye, nose and throat irritation, respiratory issues, fatigue ...
Penn engineers send quantum signals with standard internet protocol
2025-08-28
In a first-of-its-kind experiment, engineers at the University of Pennsylvania brought quantum networking out of the lab and onto commercial fiber-optic cables using the same Internet Protocol (IP) that powers today’s web. Reported in Science, the work shows that fragile quantum signals can run on the same infrastructure that carries everyday online traffic. The team tested their approach on Verizon’s campus fiber-optic network.
The Penn team’s tiny “Q-chip” coordinates quantum and classical data ...
Placebo pain relief works differently across human body, study finds
2025-08-28
New research finds the human brain has a built-in pain map that activates in different areas when relieving face, arm or leg pain.
But placebo pain relief only works where the brain expects it.
Further research may help to unlock safer, targeted pain treatments.
Researchers from the University of Sydney have used placebo pain relief to uncover a map-like system in the brainstem that controls pain differently depending on where it’s felt in the body. The findings may pave the way for safer, more targeted treatments for chronic pain that don’t rely on opioids.
Like a highway, the brainstem connects the brain to the spinal cord and manages all signals ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
American Meteorological Society announces new executive director
People with “binge-watching addiction” are more likely to be lonely
Wild potato follows a path to domestication in the American Southwest
General climate advocacy ad campaign received more public engagement compared to more-tailored ad campaign promoting sustainable fashion
Medical LLMs may show real-world potential in identifying individuals with major depressive disorder using WhatsApp voice note recordings
Early translational study supports the role of high-dose inhaled nitric oxide as a potential antimicrobial therapy
AI can predict preemies’ path, Stanford Medicine-led study shows
A wild potato that changed the story of agriculture in the American Southwest
Cancer’s super-enhancers may set the map for DNA breaks and repair: A key clue to why tumors become aggressive and genetically unstable
Prehistoric tool made from elephant bone is the oldest discovered in Europe
Mineralized dental plaque from the Iron Age provides insight into the diet of the Scythians
Salty facts: takeaways have more salt than labels claim
When scientists build nanoscale architecture to solve textile and pharmaceutical industry challenges
Massive cloud with metallic winds discovered orbiting mystery object
Old diseases return as settlement pushes into the Amazon rainforest
Takeaways are used to reward and console – study
Velocity gradients key to explaining large-scale magnetic field structure
Bird retinas function without oxygen – solving a centuries-old biological mystery
Pregnancy- and abortion-related mortality in the US, 2018-2021
Global burden of violence against transgender and gender-diverse adults
Generative AI use and depressive symptoms among US adults
Antibiotic therapy for uncomplicated acute appendicitis
Childhood ADHD linked to midlife physical health problems
Patients struggle to measure blood pressure at home
A new method to unlock vast lithium stores
Scientists unveil “dissolution barocaloric” cooling, opening new path to zero-carbon refrigeration
Microplastics in the atmosphere: Higher emissions from land areas than from the ocean
Metal clumps in quantum state: Vienna research team breaks records
PolyU develops new human-safe magnetorheological fibres, leading innovations in smart wearable textiles
Rice establishes Global Brain Economy Initiative in Davos, aligned with new report on brain health and AI
[Press-News.org] Yellowstone’s free roaming bison drive grassland resilienceSummary author: Walter Beckwith