| Finding "Protection" for
Wild Horses Its a long wayin miles and in habitatfrom
domesticated ponies in the verdant meadows of central Pennsylvania
to wild mustangs
in the parched high deserts of Arizona, California, Nevada, New Mexico,
and Wyoming. However, research under way in our college is bringing them
closer together.
Researchers hope that contraception methods that seem to work on a
small herd of ponies kept in a lush, partially wooded pasture at Penn
States horse
farm near Beaver Stadium can be applied to hundreds of thousands of wild horses
in the West, where overpopulation is straining habitats and wildlife management
budgets.
 |
| Contraception
research with these Penn State ponies may benefit the West's wild
horses. |
A pony is considered to be any horse that is less than 14.2 hands,
or 58 inches, high, explains equine scientist Nancy Diehl. Ponies
are a lot closer in size to wild mustangs than Penn States 1,200-pound
quarter horses, so it makes sense to do our research with ponies. We
currently have a herd of 14 ponies13 mares and a stallion.
Most contraception work with wildlifewhich is what the Wests wild
horses are considered to behas focused on vaccines. But Diehl, whose
expertise is horse behavior, teamed up with animal scientist Gary Killian,
who has done extensive contraception research with white-tailed deer, to test
a new method: inserting intrauterine devices (IUDs).
These devices are very similar to the ones that prove so effective in preventing
human pregnancies, says Diehl. Vaccines only seem to prevent pregnancies
for about a year, and the IUD appears to be a longer-lasting, more effective
method of dealing with wild horse overpopulation in the West.
Horses evolved naturally in North America, and no one is sure why they
didnt
exist on this continent at the time of European exploration. Spanish explorers
reintroduced horses to North America in the late 15th century, and American
Indians helped to spread horses throughout the Great Plains and the West. Until
as recently as the mid-twentieth century, horses continued to be released onto
public lands by the U.S. Cavalry, farmers, ranchers, and miners.
Federal law prohibits the killing or slaughter of any wild horses or burros.
Before federal protection was passed, wild horses were victims of ruthless
and indiscriminate slaughter for meat and hides, and their numbers plummeted.
Today, however, wild horses are reproducing at an alarming rateherds
of hundreds of thousands have been increasing by 15 to 20 percent per year,
doubling their population every four years. They can be collected for adoption
by private citizensand annually thousands arebut adoption is limited
by the difficulty and unpredictability of the taming process.
Not nearly enough wild horses are adopted to control the wild populations,
so many western states collect thousands of the animals and keep them in holding
facilities that are humane but crowded and demoralizing to the captive horses, says
Diehl, who journeyed to the Reno, Nevada, area last year to assess the situation.
From a behavioral standpoint, the holding facilities are disasters for
the horses. The states are doing the best they can, but the horses collected
can never be released back into the wild, and most are there for as long as they
live.
Using IUDs eventually may alleviate the population problem, but inserting
them in wild horses wont be as easy as it is with domestic ponies. The
ponies are docile and just stand there, says Diehl. With the wild
mustangs, IUDs would have to be inserted as part of a program that involves
capturing them and administering anesthesia to take blood and other samples.
Last year, Killian worked with the state wildlife agency in Nevada
to insert IUDs in 15 captured mustangs. They are presently being monitored, Diehl
says. There are many questions to be answered. We want to know that the
IUDs stay in and work under natural breeding conditions, and we need to know
that they are safe for the horses.
Diehl also wants to be certain the IUDs dont damage the wild horses social
structure. Wild horses have a very important social structure, made up
of small groups consisting of a stallion and a harem of mares, she explains. We
want to see the effects of mares not getting pregnant. There no doubt will
be more wear and tear on the stallions. We will be monitoring their behavior
as well as their physiology. We must be sure not to alter the harem structure,
because if we change the harem structure, we change wild horses as we know
them.
Jeff Mulhollem
|