ROCK SPRINGS, Wyo. (AP) - The Bureau of Land Management is proposing to remove about 1,000 wild horses from three herd management areas, including Adobe Town, in southwest Wyoming in order to meet population level objectives.
Kimberlee Foster, field manager for the Rock Springs BLM field office, said there are too many horses on the land, and rules require them to remove horses when they are above management levels.
Foster said the gathered horses will go to the Rock Springs Holding Facility where they will be put up for adoption.
The BLM plans to remove 210 horses from Adobe Town, 584 from Salt Wells Creek and 235 from Great Divide Basin.
There are many reasons the BLM must carefully maintain certain population ranges for wild horses in Wyoming. For one, there are no natural predators for horses in the state and equines can be prodigious breeders.
“Typically a herd management area can double in size every four or five years,” Foster told the Rawlins Daily Times (https://bit.ly/2mayVKA ).
If wild horse populations become too large, the natural forage on the land won’t be able to support them.
Herd management is based around the usage of the land, Foster said, as well as the amount of available forage for the animals. Additionally, the BLM has agreed to act to reduce herd sizes should population levels reach a certain point.
The BLM is accepting public comment until April 4 on its horse roundup plan.
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Information from: Rawlins (Wyo.) Daily Times, https://www.rawlinstimes.com
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