In a victory for America’s wild horses, the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) no longer plans to use dangerous and possibly deadly surgical sterilizations on mares.
Wild Horses in the Confusion Herd Management Area (Courtesy of
American Wild Horse Campaign)
In a victory for America’s wild horses, the Bureau of Land
Management (BLM) no longer plans to use dangerous and possibly
deadly surgical sterilizations on mares in Utah’s Confusion Herd
Management Area, given two lawsuits filed against the agency by wild
horse advocacy groups.
The lawsuits from the American Wild Horse Campaign (AWHC) and Return
to Freedom — alleging that the sterilizations are inhumane,
unnecessary, and a violation of federal law — are still pending in
state and federal courts. So BLM’s Public Affairs Specialist Lisa
Reid couldn’t say much.
But what she did say was that the sterilizations are no longer
happening.
“The Bureau of Land Management does not intend to surgically
sterilize wild mares using ovariectomy via colpotomy under the
agency’s October 2020 Confusion Herd Management Area Decision,” Reid
told LFT via email. “The BLM will continue to evaluate effective and
humane ways to manage and protect wild horses and burros on public
lands.”
Nearly 32,000 people signed our petition demanding humane treatment
for these wild and iconic animals, and we are thrilled to provide
this update.
The BLM had approved shoving foot-long metal rods into the vulvas of
wild mares and then severing their ovaries blindly with a chain — a
controversial procedure known as ovariectomy via colpotomy — as part
of its plan to reduce the wild horse population from 551 to 70 over
the next 10 years.
The surgeries had never been attempted on a large scale with wild
horses before, though studies in controlled environments had led to
numerous complications: including a horse bleeding to death, a mare
aborting a foal, and another mare requiring multiple blood
transfusions to survive — the last intervention’s treatment
obviously not open to wild mares on the open range.
The BLM gathered the horses and planned the surgeries for 17 mares
for this spring, but then the two animal welfare groups sued —
catalyzing the federal agency’s shift to seeking effective and
humane alternatives.
This wild horse victory comes on the heels of some sad news,
unfortunately. Five wild horses died as a result of the BLM’s
roundups from November 29 through December 9.
A helicopter round up of wild horses in Utah’s Confusion Herd
Management Area (Courtesy of
American Wild Horse Campaign)
The victims included a horse with a broken neck who crashed into the
holding panels and a foal who caught a hoof on something while
running away from the helicopters used to drive the horses to the
BLM’s corrals, with an attending vet deeming the resulting
laceration, swelling, and possible fracture cause for euthanasia.
A mother mare, recently reunited with her foal, also was shot after
the agency classified her as having “low-body condition” — or being
in poor health. Observers with the American Wild Horse Campaign, who
attended the daily roundups, wrote in their field notes of that
incident:
“A wet mare was lassoed at end of the day to reunite her with her
captured four-month-old foal. But was euthanized in the field,
according to BLM for low body condition. A vet was not consulted.
Before her death, we witnessed her evading the helicopter for about
20 to 30 minutes, dodging back and forth. Her stamina seemed okay
during that time.”
Two other mares also were shot for being in reported poor health,
according to notes from both the AWHC and the BLM.
AWHC observers noted other negative impacts to the horses during
their time in the field, including a black horse whom they watched
rearing when lassoed before he was seen “crashing to the ground” and
another lassoed horse who was “yanked back so hard that they flipped
backward, this time landing on their head and neck.”
They also noted that “once in the pen, horses would often smash at
full speed against the panels.”
By the last day of the roundups, the BLM and their contractors had
captured more than 300 wild horses from the area who were then taken
to holding pens or transferred to off-range contract wild horse
facilities.
According to the agency’s data, that total included 92 stallions,
137 mares, and 74 foals.
The BLM said that horses not adopted would be relocated to
long-range pastures throughout the United States.