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Buffalo
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buffalo

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Ploughing with Asiatic water buffalo, Guilin, China. Much agricultural work in China is carried out using traditional methods. The normal wetland habitat of the buffalo suits it to use in flooded rice paddies.
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Asiatic water buffalo are used for ploughing rice fields in Bali. They are well-adapted to use in the flooded fields, as this is their natural habitat.

Either of two species of wild cattle. The Asiatic water buffalo Bubalis bubalis is found domesticated throughout South Asia and wild in parts of India and Nepal. It likes moist conditions. Usually grey or black, up to 1.8 m/6 ft tall, both sexes carry large horns. The African buffalo Syncerus caffer is found in Africa, south of the Sahara, where there is grass, water, and cover in which to retreat. There are a number of subspecies, the biggest up to 1.6 m/5 ft tall, and black, with massive horns set close together over the head. The name is also commonly applied to the North American bison.

Buffalo

City and port in New York State, USA, at the eastern end of Lake Erie at the head of the Niagara River; seat of Erie County; population (2000 est) 292,600. It is linked with New York City via the New York State Barge Canal (formerly the Erie Canal), and is an important inland port, especially as a centre for trade between the USA and Canada. An industrial city, Buffalo was hard hit by the closure of steel mills and car factories in the late 1970s and early 1980s.

History

First settled in 1780 and laid out in 1803, Buffalo was burned down by the British during the War of 1812, but was soon rebuilt and flourished with the completion of the Erie Canal (1825). It was incorporated as a city in 1832, and by 1850 had become the most important flour-milling centre in the USA. Ebenezer, near the city, was the first American home of the German communal group who in the 1850s moved on to establish the Amana colonies in Iowa.

Grain from Buffalo's elevators is shipped overseas via the St Lawrence Seaway; the world's first grain elevator was opened here, in 1843. It is the seat of several colleges including the State University of New York at Buffalo (1846), Canisius College (1870), Medaille College (1875), D'Youville College (1908), and Daemen College (1947).

Buffalo has associations with several presidents: the 13th president, Millard Fillmore (1800–1874), and the 22nd and 24th president, Grover Cleveland (1837–1908), were both Buffalo lawyers. The 25th president, William McKinley (1843–1901), was assassinated in Buffalo at a reception at the Pan American Exposition. His successor, Theodore Roosevelt, took the oath of office here.

buffalo

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The North American bison Bison bison was hunted almost to extinction for food and sport by the European colonials. At one time the population of bison numbered up to 50 million, living in massive herds of thousands of individual animals. By 1889 there were only 540 left. Today they live in protected reserves.

Common name of the North American bison, a large brown hoofed mammal of the bovine (cattle) family, with a heavy mane and sloping hindquarters. Buffalo roamed the Great Plains of the USA in herds of millions until their virtual extinction by American hunters in the 1870s and 1880s, when less than a hundred animals remained. The animals were the main source of the food and materials that supported the way of life of the Plains Indians, and their destruction made the Indians unable to sustain their battle against American settlement of their lands. Buffalo now survive in protected reservations, where their population reached an estimated 14,000 in 1994.

The buffalo and the Plains Indians

The Plains Indians believed that the creator, Waken Tanka to the Sioux or Lakota, had placed the buffalo on the Earth. They believed that the buffalo were of equal status to themselves as creatures created by Waken Tanka, but that the creator had supplied the buffalo to give them food and materials for life.

When hunting the buffalo, the Plains Indians ensured that only as many as were needed at that time were killed. To waste a buffalo would be an insult to Waken Tanka and would damage the great circle of life. After the hunt the Plains Indians placed the heart of the buffalo back on the Plains to give life back to the herd and ensure the herd's long-term survival. The Plains Indians used every other part of the buffalo in some way; for instance, the tongue was used as a hairbrush, the skull for religious ceremonies, the tail as a fly swat, and the hooves for glue. Without the buffalo the Plains Indians could not survive as it provided them with materials they could not obtain elsewhere on the Plains, but that were vital to their survival.

Destruction of the herds

After the end of the American Civil War (1861–65), American citizens moved on to the Great Plains in increasing numbers as homesteaders arrived, the cattle industry developed, and the Transcontinental Railroad opened up the region. Hunters gathered around railroad towns such as Dodge City, and killed the buffalo for its carcass. At first they sold the meat to the railroad companies to feed their workers. However demand soon grew for buffalo hide or skin, as it was a good source of leather. Buffalo bones could be ground up in the cities of the eastern USA to make fertilizer. Hunters such as the US scout William Cody, known as Buffalo Bill, shot thousands of buffalo and made fortunes from their work. By 1880 the buffalo on the Great Plains had been reduced from around 13 million in 1850 to less than a hundred animals.

The destruction of the buffalo did not begin as a deliberate policy of the US government, but it quickly realized that once the buffalo were gone the Plains Indians would be unable to support themselves. In 1873 US general Philip Sheridan commented that, ‘These men (the buffalo hunters) have done more in the last two years, and will do more in the next year, to settle the vexed Indian question, than the entire regular army has done in the last thirty years. They are destroying the Indians' food supply.’ Once their means of survival was removed, the Plains Indians were forced to surrender to the US Army and move to Indian reservations.



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The forest hog or boar grows to a frightening size in those kinds of wilds, and the African forest buffalo ?
Other mammals of conservation concern present in the SNP were: forest elephant (Loxodonta africana cyclotis), leopard (Panthera pardus), giant pangolin (Smutsia gigantean), African forest buffalo (Syncerus caller nanus), bongo (Tragelaphus euryceros), sitatunga (Tragelaphus spekei), blue duiker (Cephalophus monticola), bay duiker (Cephalophus dorsalis), and water chevrotain (Hyemoschus aquaticus).
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