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There are many myths about Mustangs and the BLM. For more information on those, please visit http://savethemustanghorses.blogspot.com/p/myths-about-mustangs.html
The BLM is part of the Department of the Interior. The BLM runs many different programs and there are many branches of the BLM, most of which of quite beneficial, but when I refer to the BLM, I will be referring to their Wild Horse and Burro Program. The BLM was charged with the protection of wild horses when the Wild Horse and Burro Act was passed in 1971. They are allowed to use helicopters in roundups if the land can't support the Mustangs. There mission is to balance the needs of the various users to the public lands.
Rounded up horses are offered for adoption and some are sent to prisons, where inmates train the horses to improve the horses' chance of adoption, and to help the inmates learn a new skill to use when they are released.
The BLM in recent years has complained there are too many horses not being adopted, and it's recently that things have officially gone to "war."
While the U.S. government was required to place the responsibility of managing feral horses with a branch of the government, giving that responsibility to the BLM may not have been the best of the choices available. Before the Wild Horse and Burro Act was passed, the BLM had a "shoot on sight" policy regarding Mustangs and all feral horses. The BLM was also the chief opponant of the passing of the Wild Horse and Burro Act. The U.S. government required an organization that's original policy was to kill and eradicate feral horses, charge to suddenly protect those same animals. Needless to say, it hasn't gone over well. Today, many people who work in the BLM work there to help care for Mustangs, but there is also a signifigant group within the BLM who simply do not care, and many who have openly stated that they dislike Mustangs.
Off and on during history, the BLM has gained and lost the right to sell Mustangs in captivity to slaughter. Often, the government gives the BLM more money to care for the horses already captured so that they BLM will not have to sell them to slaughter. Instead of using the money to maintain the horses they have, the BLM steps up roundups. Thousands of Mustangs have been gathered, and most herds have been completely zeroed out.
The National Academy of Sciences, in a recent study mandated by Congress, found that BLM roundups are actually causing population growth, not reducing it. Because herds are unnaturally kept at populations lower than their food limit forces, and their natural predators have been hunted, Mustangs have no need to limit their population. As animals will do, they breed. The more and more roundups that take place and the more and more horses removed, the more Mustangs attempt to replenish their population. The species springs back as it would after a natural disaster or plague. Such rapid population growth and lack of genetic material is not healthy for the horses, the habitats, or the native wildlife around them. As the roundups are costly, and rapid population growth requires more and more roundups to take place each year, the BLM's roundup campaign is quickly becoming unreasonable.
Congressional investigations have revealed the truth: the BLM has no evidence, no scientific evidence at all, to support the roundups. In spite of claims to the contrary, they were rounding up herds and then increasing the number of public land leases to cattle ranchers. In most states, cattle outnumber wild horses 50 to 1, and in a few states, cattle outnumber Mustangs 200 to 1. In addition, some documents suggest mining companies have been exploring the areas and want the horses out of the way.
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