European Bison
The Wisent is the European bison, species Bison bonasus.
Often it is mistakenly referred to as aurochs. (A notable difference of the aurochs is long horns.)
The animal was first described in scientific literature by Linnaeus in 1758. It was classified by the IUCN in 1996 as endangered.
The wisent is Europe's heaviest land animal. A typical individual is about 2.9 m long and 1.8 - 1.9 m tall, and weighs 300 to 920 kg. It is taller and less massive than its close relation, the American bison. They also have shorter hair than American bison. Wisent are forest dwelling animals. They have few predators with only scattered reports from the 1800s of wolf and bear predation.
The wisent was reduced to two herds with a couple hundred animals by the 11th century. In 1927 less than 50 remained, all in zoos as the last wild wisent were killed by poachers after World War I. Wisents have been re-introduced sucessfully into the wild in forest preserves like Belavezhskaya Pushcha in Poland and Belarus. Zoos have also quite a few animals. There were 3200 individuals as of 1994, all descended from only 12 individuals.
Trivia
- Wisent, or Zubr in Belarusian (and Russian) is the largest wild animal in Belarus, and it is a national symbol of Belarus today.
- Zubrovka vodka is (indirectly) named after this animal: it is a bitter tincture of the "zubrovka grass".
Public domain image from Webster's Dictionary 1911
(larger image)
Referenced By
Bovinae | Bovine
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