Water buffalo have not been seen as wild animals in Europe for over 100,000 years. From the distant epoch before the last ice age there is evidence of the now extinct European water buffalo (Bubalus murrensis) from the Mediterranean and the Rhine Valley.
After the last ice age, water buffalo were found in large parts of South and Southeast Asia, perhaps also in Mesopotamia. Today there are only small remaining populations of these wild animals in India, Bhutan, Nepal and Thailand.
Over 5,000 years ago, water buffalo were domesticated in at least two different locations, India and southern China. Their descendants, the domestic water buffalo, are now kept in large areas of South Asia and in northern South America. Domestic water buffalo also live in Europe. They were introduced in the early Middle Ages, around 1,300 years ago. The domestic buffalo living in Europe are descended from the Indian buffalo. They are mainly found in the Balkans and Italy. There they deliver the milk for the popular mozzarella cheese.
Water buffalo are frugal animals. You can use forage of lower quality than the domestic cattle that we normally use. Above all, however, they can develop habitats that domestic cattle would avoid: wetlands, swampy terrain, bog areas. Water buffalo are good at swimming and like to be around and in the water. They are sensitive to heat because they only have a small number of sweat glands. Buffalo cows can give birth and raise their calves healthily in the pasture when there is snow. Bulls can weigh up to 1,000 kg, cows can weigh up to 700 kg.
In the national park, water buffalo are not released into the wild or kept as a substitute for the wild form that has long been extinct. Wherever they graze they replace domestic cattle. Parts of the national park must continue to be managed. In this way, the landscape is kept open and structured. Habitats for different species are thereby kept free or created. Whether this works better with water buffalo than with the cattle kept otherwise is to be tested here.
The Wolfgang Dehnert farm from Gartz/Oder keeps a herd of around 100 water buffalo on the grassland between Friedrichsthal and Gartz/Oder.
You can usually find the water buffalo herd in the Friedrichsthaler Polder (5/6), east of Bundesstraße 2 between Friedrichsthal and Gartz/Oder (see map). In summer, the animals are also kept in the Fiddichower Polder (10), i.e. in the polder between the Hohensaaten-Friedrichsthaler Wasserstraße and the Strom or at different locations.