Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Wild horses face N.D. park ejection

Proposal could sever cultural link to past

- By Jack Dura

BISMARCK, N.D. — The beloved wild horses that roam freely in North Dakota’s Theodore Roosevelt National Park could be removed under a National Park Service proposal that worries advocates who say the horses are a cultural link to the past.

Visitors who drive the scenic park road can often see bands of horses, a symbol of the West and sight that delights tourists. Advocates want to see the horses continue to roam the Badlands, and disagree with park officials who have branded the horses as “livestock.”

The Park Service is revising its livestock plans and writing an environmen­tal assessment to examine the impacts of taking no new action — or to remove the horses altogether.

Removal would entail capturing horses and giving some of them first to tribes, and later auctioning the animals or giving them to other entities. Another approach would include techniques to prevent future reproducti­on and would allow those horses to live out the rest of their lives in the park.

The horses have allies in government leaders and advocacy groups. One advocate says the horses’ popularity won’t stop park officials from removing them from the landscape of North Dakota’s top tourist attraction.

“At the end of the day, that’s our national park paid for by our tax dollars, and those are our horses. We have a right to say what happens in our park and to the animals that live there,” Chasing Horses Wild Horse Advocates President Chris Kman told The Associated Press.

Last year, Park Superinten­dent Angie Richman told The Bismarck Tribune that the park has no law or requiremen­t for the horses to be in the park. Regardless of what decision is ultimately made, the park will have to reduce its roughly 200 horses to 35-60 animals under a 1978 environmen­tal assessment’s population objective, she previously said.

Kman said she would like the park “to use science” to “properly manage the horses,” including a minimum of 150-200 reproducti­ve horses for genetic viability. Impacts of the park’s use of a contracept­ive on mares are unclear, she added.

Ousting the horse population “would have a detrimenta­l impact on the park as an ecosystem,” Kman said. The horses are a historical fixture, while the park reintroduc­ed bison and elk, she said.

A couple bands of wild horses were accidental­ly fenced into the park after it was establishe­d in 1947, said Castle Mclaughlin, who in the 1980s researched the history and origins of the horses while working as a graduate student for the Park Service in North Dakota.

Park officials in the early years sought to eradicate the horses, shooting them on sight and hiring local cowboys to round them up and remove them, she said. The park even sold horses to a local zoo at one point to be food for large cats.

Around 1970, a new superinten­dent discovered Roosevelt had written about the presence of wild horses in the Badlands during his time there. Park officials decided to retain the horses as a historic demonstrat­ion herd to interpret the open-range ranching era. “However, the Park Service still wasn’t thrilled about them,” Mclaughlin told the AP.

“Basically they’re like cultural artifacts almost because they reflect several generation­s of western North Dakota ranchers and Native people. They were part of those communitie­s,” and might have ties to Hunkpapa Lakota leader Sitting Bull, she said.

In the 1880s, Theodore Roosevelt hunted and ranched as a young man in the Badlands of what is now western North Dakota. The Western tourist town of Medora is at the gates of the national park that bears his name.

Roosevelt looms large in North Dakota, where a presidenti­al library in his honor is under constructi­on near the park — a legislativ­e push in 2019 that was championed by Republican Gov. Doug Burgum.

Republican U.S. Sen. John Hoeven of North Dakota has included legislatio­n in the U.S. Interior Department’s appropriat­ions bill that he told the AP “would direct them to keep horses in the park in line with what was there at the time that Teddy Roosevelt was out in Medora.”

 ?? Jack Dura
The Associated Press ?? A wild horse stands near Peaceful Valley Ranch in Theodore Roosevelt National Park near Medora, N.D. The National Park Service has proposed removing the horses.
Jack Dura The Associated Press A wild horse stands near Peaceful Valley Ranch in Theodore Roosevelt National Park near Medora, N.D. The National Park Service has proposed removing the horses.

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