Wild horse roundup to corral 6,000 in West
BLM plan appeases ranchers, critics say
RENO, Nev. – Federal land managers have announced plans to remove nearly 6,000 more wild horses from ranges across the West in the next few months, including some 3,500 mustangs in Nevada.
Bureau of Land Management officials said roundups also are planned in Arizona, California, Montana, Utah and Wyoming through the winter to protect rangelands and wildlife habitat from the impact of overpopulated horse herds.
At the same time, officials announced they would apply a fertility-control vaccine to hundreds of mares and adjust sex ratios in some herds to favor males in an effort to reduce the number of on-the-range pregnancies.
Plans also call for the removal of more than 2,000 mustangs in Wyoming.
Elsewhere, similar roundups will target about 40 horses in Utah and 30 in Montana.
Nevada has roughly half of the 33,000 wild horses that freely roam 10 Western states.
Activists sharply criticized Friday’s announcement by the agency, saying the ongoing mass removal of wild horses from public lands will result in the stockpiling of thousands of more horses in holding facilities at taxpayer expense.
There now are roughly 40,000 horses in short- and long-term holding facilities in the West and Midwest. Over the 2010 fiscal year, holding costs accounted for $36.9 million, or 57 percent, of the BLM wild horse and burro program’s $63.9 million budget.
Activists accuse the BLM of removing the animals to appease ranchers, whose cattle compete for forage with horses.
“The BLM is misleading Congress and the public when it claims that it is reforming, because the agency continues to clear the land of mustangs to make room for commercial livestock grazing,” said Suzanne Roy of the American Wild Horse Preservation Campaign, a coalition of environmental, public interest and animal rights organizations.
But BLM officials said advocacy groups’ calls for a moratorium on all BLM gathers are unrealistic because horse herds grow at an average rate of 20 percent a year and can double in size every four years. Public rangelands are not able to withstand the impacts from overpopulated herds, they added.