The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Nearly 200 feral horses die in search for water

- By Kristine Phillips

Nearly 200 feral horses, besieged with famine and dehydratio­n, were found dead on a dried-up stock pond on Navajo land in Arizona.

The animals went to the pond in Gray Mountain, an unincorpor­ated community in Coconino County in north central Arizona, in search of water.

But they somehow found themselves burrowed into the mud and too weak to escape, said Jonathan Nez, vice president of the Navajo Nation, which is the largest Native American tribe in the country and covers parts of Arizona, New Mexico and Utah.

Some of the 191 horses were buried neck deep in the mud, Navajo officials said. Some were buried beneath others. Pictures show the horses’ overlappin­g bodies, arranged roughly like a circle, as they lie on the parched earth.

The mass deaths come as Arizona experience­s an exceptiona­l drought unlike anything it’s seen in more than a decade. Navajo officials say horses dying near an empty watering pond is “not a new but a seasonal issue.”

The deaths also underscore an overpopula­tion of free-roaming horses, a problem entangled in competing interests, scarcity of resources and tribal cultural values.

About 73,000 horses and burros roam free in the western United States; that number has far exceeded what government officials say the land can sustain. With such overpopula­tion, having herds of free-roaming horses has become expensive. For example, damages the animals cause cost the Navajo Nation more than $200,000 a year. According to the Navajo Department of Agricultur­e, one horse consumes 18 pounds of forage a day. Removing as many as 13 dozen horses would save the Navajo Nation more than 290,000 gallons of water and 1.1 million pounds of forage a year.

But the issue has been a divisive one.

The Navajo tribe reveres horses, which have become the iconic symbols of the American West and are deeply entrenched in the Navajo people’s beliefs and traditions.

“It’s a sensitive subject to begin with because horses are considered sacred animals, so you just can’t go out and euthanize them. That would go too far against cultural conditions. At the same time, we have a bunch of horses no one is caring for, so it’s a delicate balance,” former Navajo spokesman Erny Zah told the Associated Press.

In 1971, the Wild Free-Roaming Horses and Burros Act gave the animals federal protection­s while allowing the interior secretary to sell or euthanize older and unadoptabl­e animals.

But for much of the past three decades, Congress has used annual appropriat­ions bill riders to prohibit the killing of healthy animals and any “sale that results in their destructio­n for processing into commercial products,” The Washington Post’s Karin Brulliard reported.

Navajo leaders have faced resistance in the past as they tried to find ways to control the population.

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