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Toyota Prius driver hits, kills bison on U.S. 40 near Craig

Driver escaped injury on Monday night, but animal was killed

Bison graze in a pasture at West Bijou Ranch on Aug. 2, 2017, in Strasburg.
Seth McConnell, YourHub
A bison was killed Monday night west of Craig on U.S. 40 in a collision with a Toyota Prius. The driver of the Prius was not injured, according to the Colorado State Patrol. (Photo by Seth McConnell/The Denver Post)
DENVER, CO - NOVEMBER 8:  Aldo Svaldi - Staff portraits at the Denver Post studio.  (Photo by Eric Lutzens/The Denver Post)
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Drivers in western Colorado know to keep an eye out for deer and the occasional moose or elk that might stray onto the roadway. But on Monday night, a driver of a Toyota Prius ran into a bison in the dark on U.S. 40 west of Craig and lived to tell about it.

“The highway stayed open. There were no injuries to the driver,” said Colorado State Patrol Trooper Gabriel Moltrer.

The bison was killed in the accident, which occurred near milepost 74 at around 10:34 p.m. That mile marker is near the Lay Valley Bison Ranch. Efforts to reach someone at the ranch were not successful.

A Pew Trust occur each year in the U.S. between motor vehicles and large animals, resulting in 200 human fatalities, 26,000 injuries and about $8 billion in property damages.

Colorado is considered a low-risk state when it comes to vehicle versus animal collisions, likely because such a large share of the population is concentrated along the northern Front Range, according to a .

In Wyoming, a high-risk state, about a fifth of reported collisions involve an animal, according to the Pew study. Drivers nationally have a one in 127 chance of being involved in a collision with an animal, according to State Farm.

Deer are the large animal most frequently hit on a road in the U.S., while collisions involving bison are very rare. Bison collisions are more of a problem in northwestern Canada, especially Alberta and the Northwest Territories, where wood bison roam freely.

John Graves, president of the Rocky Mountain Bison Association, which has 100 members in Colorado and Wyoming, said ranchers, whether they are raising cattle or bison, work hard to keep their livestock away from roads.

But fencing isn’t always foolproof and young animals in particular are curious by nature and some find a way to slip through barriers, he said.

 

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