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Federal agencies plan wild horse emergency roundup after Eastern Oregon wildfire

Wild horses at the Bureau of Land Management's corral in Hines, Ore., in 2017.
Bureau of Land Management
Wild horses at the Bureau of Land Management's corral in Hines, Ore., in 2017.

The Rail Ridge Fire in Grant County burned much of the grass that wild horse herds need to survive through winter.

Federal officials say wild horses in Eastern Oregon are at risk of starving after a wildfire burned through an expanse of wildlands over the summer.

So the U.S. Bureau of Land Management and Forest Service have proposed trapping up to 400 horses near John Day and keeping them at BLM鈥檚 wild horse corral while native grasses and shrubs recover. Agency staff say that recovery could take at least two years, though they haven鈥檛 proposed an exact timeline for when the horses would be released.

With the threat of winter weather around the corner, the agencies are proposing a tight turnaround for this emergency roundup. The public has until Monday to assess the proposal and provide comments.

The Rail Ridge Fire burned across 176,000 acres. Though much of it burned at low levels 鈥 which is consistent with the area鈥檚 natural fire regime, BLM documents say 鈥 it consumed much of the grass that the wild horses need to survive through winter.

BLM estimates there are about 660 horses roaming this region, a span of about 143,000 acres of public and private lands in Grant County called the Murderer鈥檚 Creek Wild Horse Joint Management Area.

The emergency roundup comes as the BLM and Forest Service finalize a herd management plan for the area, which would allow them to trap horses and administer contraceptives to females. The agencies aim to reduce the herd population down to between 50 and 140 adults. Their proposed plan says the herd has grown too large, and that鈥檚 impeding cattle grazing and wildlife rehabilitation in the area.

The Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife has requested the agencies remove all wild horses from state lands within the management area.

Wild horse advocates say gathering these horses ahead of winter is the right move, since they are at risk of starvation.

Wild horses at the Bureau of Land Management's corral in Hines, Ore., in 2015. They had been captured in the Kiger and Riddle Mountain areas.
Bureau of Land Management
Wild horses at the Bureau of Land Management's corral in Hines, Ore., in 2015. They had been captured in the Kiger and Riddle Mountain areas.

鈥淎lso, there has to be some forage out there for the deer now,鈥 Theresa Barbour, executive director of the Oregon Wild Horse Organization, said. 鈥淭hey need that forage.鈥

Still, she says she鈥檚 worried agency staff might use this opportunity to start administering population control methods to female horses before the herd management plan has been completed. Spokespeople with both agencies said they won鈥檛 begin birth control administration until the management plans are finalized. The Forest Service might castrate some male horses that act aggressively, to protect staff or other horses.

鈥淭here鈥榮 definitely tension about these things,鈥 Forest Supervisor Ann Niesen of Malheur National Forest said, adding that the emergency gather is for the horses鈥 well-being. 鈥淚 wish we were done with the herd management plan, too, but these fires do their own thing.鈥

The agencies will trap horses by luring them into pens using water and food as bait, then a trip wire will close a gate behind them. They鈥檒l be kept in corrals run by each of the agencies, including one in Hines.

鈥淭hey receive high-quality feed every single day,鈥 Tara Thissell, a spokesperson for the BLM Burns District, said. 鈥淭hey have fresh, quality water at all times. So they鈥檙e going to receive quite a bit of attention while they鈥檙e in holding.鈥

BLM says these horses are likely descendants of animals lost or turned loose by settlers and ranchers. Still, wild horse advocates take issue with agencies treating wild horses as invasive species.

Scientists believe horses once roamed North America until they inexplicably after the last ice age. If their disappearance was human-caused, then their reappearance in the late 1400s along with the Spanish conquistadors could be considered a species reintroduction.

This story comes from the Northwest News Network, a collaboration between public media organizations in Oregon and Washington.

Copyright 2024 Oregon Public Broadcasting

April Ehrlich reports on lands and environmental policy for Oregon Public Broadcasting, a JPR news partner. Her reporting comes to JPR through the Northwest News Network, a collaboration between public media organizations in Oregon and Washington.