Wild Horse Herds' Mystique
Finally Tempered By Reality
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) Wild horses, with
flaring nostrils and flashing manes, are the defiant free
spirits of the West.
Yet they are invaders, too, damaging land and making
it uninhabitable for native species that have evolved
over thousands of years.
The wild horses found in 10 western states claim
diverse origins. Some are descended directly from the
first modern horses brought to the New World by the
Spanish conquistadors about 500 years ago. Others are
from herds that were managed and culled by ranchers who
sold the horses to the U.S. Cavalry at the turn of the
century.
Although they aren't natives horse ancestors
disappeared from the continent more than 11,000 years ago
they have taken well to their new home.
They reproduce like coyotes and have few natural
predators, says Bud Cribley, the Bureau of Land
Management's senior wild horse and burro specialist in
Washington, D.C. With a reproduction rate of about 19
percent a year, a herd can double its population in three
or four years, he said.
``The population essentially would increase unchecked
until the horses eat themselves out of house and home,''
Cribley said. ``We have to keep in mind wild horses were
not a part of the ecosystem in the West.''
The United States has a wild horse population of about
39,470 animals, according to 1998 BLM figures, the most
recent available. The BLM, which manages the herds,
estimates the land they live on can support about 22,778
animals. Roughly 16,500 animals are classified as
``excess.''
The most visible problem caused by horse
overpopulation is competition for forage that would be
eaten by ranchers' cattle. A 1999 study by Cornell
University researcher David Pimentel estimates that about
$5 million per year in forage is lost to wild horses.
Nevada has, by far, the most wild horses of any state,
said Terry Woosley, leader for the BLM's wild horse and
burro program in Nevada. The horses there, which are
reproducing faster than the bureau's adoption program can
remove them, have clashed with some federally listed
"threatened" and "endangered"
species.
Wild horses have tramped through and eaten vegetation
along the banks of streams that are home to the Lahontan
cutthroat trout, a threatened species that is native to
Nevada. In some areas, they helped destroy the trouts'
habitat.
Horses were removed from some areas or fenced out.
Woosley said grazing animals of all types from
cattle to elk _also have contributed to the
problem.
Wild horses and burros also eat forage favored by the
endangered Mojave Desert Tortoise, which lives in Arizona
and Nevada. A program began last year to remove horses
and burros from tortoise habitat, said Kelly Grissom,
wild horse and burro specialist with the Arizona BLM
office in Phoenix.
Decades of grazing, fire and other disturbances have
changed the type of vegetation on the range to plants the
tortoises don't eat.
Good range management has created its own problems for
the wild horses.
``The better we manage them, the longer they live and
the better they reproduce,'' Cribley said. ``It kills us
from the management perspective.''
Solutions to the problem are limited by a law Congress
passed in 1971 known as the Wild Free Roaming Horse and
Burro Act. The act protects wild horses and burros from
capture, branding, harassment, or death, and sets out the
maximum penalty of a $2000 fine and a year in jail.
The only control methods allowed by federal law are
rounding up animals for adoption and placing the older,
unadoptable horses onto private land in Oklahoma leased
by the BLM for use as a sanctuary.
The BLM is helping subsidize private research into
animal contraceptives, but that solution is still a long
way off, Woosley said.
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