Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

We can save North Dakota’s wild horses

- By Christine Kman Christine Kman is co-founder of Chasing Horses Wild Horse Advocates.

Wild horses were roaming the North Dakota Badlands long before Theodore Roosevelt National Memorial Park was establishe­d in 1947. About 200 wild horses remain, though that could go down if the National Park Service gets its way. It shouldn’t.

The park, now known as Theodore Roosevelt National Park, announced plans to eliminate the herd of wild horses or, in a compromise proposal, thin it to fewer than 60. Of the roughly 20,000 people who submitted comments in the public comment period, only about 45 supported the park’s goals.

Horses would be rounded up and offered to area tribes and government agencies, be sold at auction or euthanized. Any remaining horses would get contracept­ion. The United Tribes of North Dakota asked the park keep the horses, and the Mandan,

Hidatsa and Arikara Nation asked for a geneticall­y viable herd of horses to remain within park boundaries.

Not ‘livestock’

All of this is unnecessar­y. The horses are a cultural resource and an economic driver in North Dakota. But the park refuses to acknowledg­e any negative impact if the horses are removed and admits that the horses are not causing environmen­tal damage or affecting the park ecosystem or forage for native species.

Despite that, park officials continue to label the horses as “livestock,” which they claim are not native and not allowed in national parks. Officials claim the horses could compete with native plants and animals — including bison and elk, which had to be reintroduc­ed, unlike the horses. The horses could be allowed to stay simply by changing their designatio­n from “livestock” to “cultural resource.”

The park’s “thinning” proposal to reduce the herd is not a sound compromise. Gene variation is important to any population. Small herds are more susceptibl­e to disease and genetic maladies. Leading wild horse geneticist Gus Cothran cautioned the park that keeping numbers that low would mean a loss in genetic viability, stress the horses and make the remaining horses more aggressive.

There are approximat­ely 1,000 wild horses on National Park Service lands. But Theodore Roosevelt National Park is the only one working to eliminate them. Wild horses on NPS lands are not protected under the Wild Free-Roaming Horses and Burros Act, which has prompted advocates in other national parks to obtain federal protection for the herds.

The Shacklefor­d Banks wild horses in Cape Lookout National Seashore are shielded under the Shacklefor­d Banks Wild Horses Protection Act. The Ozark Wild Horses Protection Act conserves wild horses within the Ozark National Scenic Riverways in Missouri. These two herds also fall under the jurisdicti­on of the National Park Service.

Support for keeping the horses continues to grow. Last spring, North Dakota state legislator­s passed a resolution requesting that the horses be allowed to stay. Because the park refuses to budge, something stronger, such as a state law to protect our wild horses, should be discussed in the next legislativ­e session.

North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum has offered to contribute state resources to allow the horses to stay. Sen. John Hoeven added language to the National Park Service’s funding bill urging the park to let the horses remain. Chasing Wild Horses is hopeful that Hoeven will sponsor much-needed federal legislatio­n to protect Theodore Roosevelt National Park’s horses.

Everyone wants them

Theodore Roosevelt National Park is the No. 1 tourist destinatio­n in North Dakota. Local businesses in the neighborin­g town of Medora know that the wild horses are a big part of the draw and fear that losing the horses will hurt their bottom lines.

Park officials have dismissed those concerns despite their own report showing that 89 percent of park visitors surveyed support the ongoing presence of the wild horses. Concerns from residents and businesses prompted Medora’s town council to draft a resolution asking the park to keep the horses.

Despite the history, wide support and local economic concerns, the park’s environmen­tal assessment in September supported the eliminatio­n of the horses.

Park Superinten­dent Angie Richman has said a decision on thinning or eliminatin­g the herd will come by the end of 2024.

Theodore Roosevelt National Park’s wild horses thrill and delight about 600,000 visitors each year and do so without damaging the landscape or threatenin­g other species. They are as integral to the park as the land itself. No one — not even the National Park Service — should take these horses from the lands they and their ancestors have roamed for ages.

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