Wild Horse roundups and removals cause wild Horse populations to grow at higher than normal rates due to a biological phenomenon called 'compensatory reproduction.'
Wild Horse Roundup image from American Widl Horse Campaign
Yesterday, the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) released its 2022
wild horse and burro statistics showing a population of 82,384
animals – a decline of less than 4,000 despite the roundup and
removal of over 13,000 of the federally protected animals from the
wild last year.
The agency’s press release also touts the removal of 50,000 wild
horses from the range since 2018. Its own data, however, shows that
there were 82,000 wild horses and burros on public lands in 2018,
meaning that at best, the agency has maintained the population of
these animals despite its goal of drastically slashing population
numbers. Meanwhile, the BLM’’s continued focus on removals over the
last four years has cost taxpayers $369 million and resulted in the
stockpiling of the highest number of wild horses in history in
off-range holding facilities.
The American Wild Horse Campaign (AWHC) charged that the new numbers
prove this federal program is a fiscal and animal welfare disaster
that continues to rely on costly, inhumane and ineffective roundups
while ignoring scientifically recommended birth control as a humane
and cost-effective solution.
“The vast majority of Americans want our iconic wild horses and
burros protected on our Western public lands,” said Suzanne Roy,
executive director for AWHC.”But the federal government continues to
pursue the most inhumane, expensive, and least effective method for
managing them: capture, removal, and warehousing of these wild
free-roaming horses in taxpayer-funded holding facilities.”
AWHC points to a report commissioned by the BLM from the National
Academy of Sciences (NAS), entitled, “Using Science to Improve the
BLM Wild Horse and Burro Program,” which found that roundups and
removals cause wild horse populations to grow at higher than normal
rates due to a biological phenomenon called compensatory
reproduction. The NAS recommended that the BLM pursue fertility
control as an alternative to ineffective and costly roundups.
“The roundups are like a bandaid on a gunshot wound. They don’t
work,” Roy continued. “The agency is on a treadmill that it will
never get off without investing in fertility control to address
reproduction humanely on the range.”