Activists fought rounding up U.S. wild horses. Then came drought and
climate change
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[September 01, 2021]
By Ned Parker and Lisa Lewnes
(Reuters) - Across the U.S. West this
summer, helicopters buzz low, herding thousands of wild horses into
gated areas.
The roundups, made necessary by the devastating effects of wildfire and
drought, show how climate change is endangering the iconic wild horses,
livestock and other wildlife, according to ranchers, activists and the
U.S. government.
The dire situation on Western lands has led to unprecedented dialogue
between horse rights activists, the cattle industry and the Bureau of
Land Management (BLM), which is charged with providing federal
protection for wild horses.
Horse defenders have long hated the helicopter-led roundups, where wild
horses are herded into corrals and then brought to long-term grazing
facilities, mostly in the Midwest. A smaller number are put up for
adoption. But, faced with dwindling water and plant resources, some
rights activists have accepted the roundups as a necessary evil when
faced with climate change.
Those activists are now advocating a mix of roundups and fertility
control measures for wild horses, whose population has grown from an
estimated 30,000 in 2013 to nearly 80,000.
Stephanie Boyles Griffin, the chief scientist of the Humane Society of
the United States’ wildlife protection department, said climate change
has forced different groups to come together.
“The greatest threat to our wild horses and burros and our public lands
right now isn’t the BLM, it’s not cattle, ranching or mining interests.
It’s not animal advocates. It’s climate change and the new reality is
fast settling in.”
The worry for the survival of cattle, wild horses and wildlife in the
West has spurred this on. “No one who cares about these animals wants to
see them suffer and die of dehydration or malnutrition,” Griffin said.
Tammy Pearson, a rancher and county commissioner in Beaver County, Utah,
is a founding member of the Path Forward coalition. Pearson said that
year in year out, she is reducing her cattle herd size because of the
changing weather conditions.
“We know they're going to be hungry or starving to death because there's
not going to be water there that year,” Pearson said.
A TOUGH SHOT TO GIVE
The Path Forward group https://bit.ly/3DkxJMs is a coalition of animal
rights groups, public lands advocates, local and state government
offices and farming and cattle industry representatives that favor using
contraception aggressively so that the wild horse population achieves a
sustainable level.
They hope, as contraceptive measures ramp up and the number of wild
horses gradually stabilizes, the round ups are phased out.
The contraceptive techniques require injections ranging between one to
five years, but are reversible. The horses are injected by dart or hand
at a cost of $30 to $50 per horse, but the BLM says the cost of
capturing and holding a horse for the time required to administer a shot
costs 50 times as much as the actual shot.
In 2013, a National Academy of Sciences study noted that round ups had
not curbed the wild horse population and called fertility prevention
shots “promising”. But the BLM website describes the 2013 report as
finding "no highly effective, easily delivered and affordable
fertility-control methods" and advising further research.
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Several wild horses escape the Bureau of Land Management (BLM)
gather trap along Highway 21 near the Sulphur Herd Management Area
south of Garrison, Utah, February 26, 2015. REUTERS/Jim Urquhart
The BLM’s use of the shots stalled for most of the
decade. It delivered 384 treatments in 2014 and those numbers rose
to 735 in 2020. The BLM said in a statement that its use of
fertility controls was also slowed by lawsuits.
Of the record 18,000 horses that will be rounded up this year, 1,000
will receive fertility-control shots, said Nada Culver, the deputy
director of policy and programs for BLM.
On its website, BLM said that the vaccine technology has become more
viable over time, but the logistics to carry out a dramatic
expansion has often proved daunting because many wild horse herds
dwell on hard-to-reach terrain. Beyond that, Culver said the
populations are so large that vaccines alone cannot bring the size
down.
“The challenge in the short term is that's not going to reduce
populations,” Culver said. “It allows us to work in places where
there are stable populations at sustainable levels.”
HORSES SHOULD NOT CARRY CLIMATE BURDEN
But the Path Forward approach, which the group has lobbied for in
Washington, has been vehemently attacked by some wild horse groups.
The American Wild Horse Campaign opposes any roundups except in
emergency situations and believes that horses should receive
fertility control vaccinations only in their natural habitat. The
group’s director, Suzanne Roy, points to the work her group has
done, without gathers, delivering 4,287 contraceptive shots and
boosters to 1,474 mares since 2019.
Other groups and ranchers say it is impossible to reach enough
horses if they are free ranging.
She also dismisses the notion that horses should bear the burden of
the West’s hard times.
“There are 86,000 wild horses and burros on 27 million acres in the
West. That's a fraction of the land that's grazed by livestock,” Roy
said. She notes that some public lands are also leased by oil, gas
and mining companies who are “all huge contributors to climate
change.”
Still even with her fierce opposition to the roundups, Roy and the
American Wild Horse Campaign engaged in their first-ever
collaboration with BLM in July.
After the agency rounded up 435 wild horses from the Onaqui mountain
range in Utah, at least 123 horses were returned to the range. Some
of the mares received fertility treatments.
“It shows when there is a will, things can be done,” Roy said.
(Reporting by Ned Park in New York and Lisa Lewnes in Washington;
Editing by Lisa Shumaker)
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