Upcoming Wild Horse Roundups: Essential Information
The Bureau of Land Management (BLM) is moving forward with plans to remove nearly 10,000 wild horses from their natural habitats in Nevada, Utah, Wyoming, Oregon, and Colorado. This action follows the Interior Department's controversial proposal to euthanize tens of thousands of federally-protected wild horses and burros, pending Congressional approval. The upcoming helicopter roundups will significantly reduce wild horse populations, making way for increased cattle and sheep grazing on public lands.
The BLM has not disclosed the full impact of these roundups on the wild horses that will be captured and removed. These animals face the risk of being killed or sold for slaughter if Congress approves the BLM's request to lift the current ban on destroying healthy wild horses and burros or selling them for slaughter.
Here's what you need to know about the current and upcoming roundups the BLM is planning to conduct.
Antelope and Triple B Complexes in Nevada
What Herd Management Areas (HMAs) are involved?
Antelope Complex: Antelope, Antelope Valley, Goshute, Spruce Pequop
Triple B Complex: Triple B, Medicine Maverick, Antelope Valley, and Cherry Springs
How many horses will be rounded up and removed? 6,737 - the largest roundup of wild horses in recent history.
What will happen to these horses? BLM has requested permission from Congress to destroy “excess” horses and to sell them for slaughter. If Congress says yes, most of these horses will be killed.
How big is this area? 3.9 million acres (over 6,000 square miles – the size of Hawaii)
How many horses does BLM allow to live in this area? 899-1,678
How many acres is that per horse? 2,324 acres per horse at the high end of the population limit.
How much livestock does BLM authorize to graze in this area? 17,638 cow/calf pairs or 88,190 sheep (annual equivalent). BLM reports lower actual usage. Based on self-reporting permittees, the ten-year average grazing levels are the annual equivalent of 6,800 cow/calf pairs or 34,000 sheep. Reduced grazing is to be expected following multiple years of severe drought.
What else does the BLM plan to do:
- Geld up to 50 percent of the stallions who remain on the range.
- Skew the sex ratio of these wild horse populations to 60% male, 40% female.
- Reduce the population to near extinction level by maintaining “a core breeding population of 227 wild horses which is approximately 53% of the low end of AML” in Antelope and a core breeding population of 272 which is 63% of the low end of AML” in Triple B.”
Silver King, Nevada
What HMAs are involved? The Silver King HMA near Caliente, Nevada
How many horses will be rounded up and removed? A minimum of 960 – 90% of the existing population in the HMA.
What will happen to these horses? BLM has requested permission from Congress to destroy “excess” horses and to sell them for slaughter. If Congress says yes, most of these horses will be killed.
How big is this area? 606,000 acres (almost 950 square miles).
How many horses does BLM allow to live in this area? 60-128
How many acres is that per horse? 4,734 acres per horse at the high end of the population limit.
How much livestock does BLM authorize to graze in this area? The equivalent of 6,200 cow/calf pairs or 31,000 sheep are authorized to graze in the allotments that lie partially or wholly within this HMA. Based on self-reporting of livestock permittees, BLM claims an average ten-year use equivalent to 2,900 cow/calf pairs or 14,292 sheep.
What else does the BLM plan to do: Retain a core breeding population of 60 horses – low end of AML. Any mares released back to the range would be treated with PZP.
Wyoming Checkerboard Roundup (Scheduled for September)
What HMAs are involved? Adobe Town, Salt Wells Creek, Great Divide Basin
How many horses will be rounded up and removed? 1,560
What will happen to these horses? BLM has requested permission from Congress to destroy “excess” horses and to sell them for slaughter. If Congress says yes, most of these horses will be killed.
How big is this area? 2.4 million acres of land (3,470 square miles), 70% of which is public.
How many horses does BLM allow to live in this area? 1,276-1,765
How many acres is that per horse? 1,400 acres per horse at the high end of the population limit.
How much livestock does BLM authorize to graze in this area? The equivalent of 12,600 year-round cow/calf pairs or 63,000 sheep. Based on rancher self-reporting, the BLM states that actual use in this area last year was 55,535 AUMs, or the annual equivalent of 4,600 cow/calf pairs or over 23,000 sheep.
What else does the BLM plan to do: Release 20 mares and 20 stallions back to the Adobe Town HMA. Only horses with “readily recognized phenotypic traits of New World Iberian horses” would be returned to the HMA.