Crossbred
Crossbred American bison is a broad label for bison with mixed or uncertain ancestry rather than a named breed. The animal may come from different bison herd lines, a commercial breeding program, or a background where domestic cattle introgression cannot be ruled out. Because American bison have a strong species identity in appearance, crossbred animals can still show the expected hump, massive head, dark winter coat, beard, and compact hindquarters, so records matter more than a quick visual check.
Human management depends on the reason the animal is being kept. A ranch selling meat animals may focus on growth, fertility, hardiness, and handling safety, while a conservation herd needs a stricter view of origin, genetic testing, and separation from cattle-influenced lines. Crossbred bison should be described transparently in sale, breeding, and transfer records. Care still follows bison realities: strong perimeter fencing, low-stress handling, room for herd movement, winter forage planning, and respect for a powerful animal that remains much less domesticated than cattle.
Colors: Black-Brown, Brown with White Face, Dark Brown, Golden Brown, Light Brown, White