Desatoya roundup begins with foal abuse

“Hogtieing a young foal and leaving it in the middle of a stampede of wild horses shows how inhumane and incompetent the BLM’s roundup contractor is,” states Anne Novak, executive director of Protect Mustangs. “They should be fired immediately.”

“We are grateful Holly Hazard witnessed the alleged abuse,” Novak explains. “If she hadn’t seen this, the public would not have known that the cruel roundups are continuing despite the BLM’s promise for a ‘new normal’ by bait trapping.”

“We need more eyes on roundups to protect mustangs,” says Novak.

Read more about the incident here: http://rtfitchauthor.com/2012/08/17/problems-arise-at-desatoya-wild-horse-gather-in-nevada/

Wildfire! Take down the fencing so wild horses and burros can escape

Dead wild horse was trapped in unsafe cattle guard (Photo © Craig Downer)

Sent to Jeff Fontana with the California BLM, August 17, 2012 9:43 am, copied to the Director

Dear Jeff,

Will an open gate be adequate for wild horses and burros to pass through in a panic? How long are the gates? What about all the fenced off acreage? How tall are most of the barbed wire fences?

We ask the BLM to take down fencing to ensure wild horses and burros will not be trapped and be able to escape to safety.

How many wild horses and burros are left in the HMA right now?

Please send me a PDF of the BLM’s order to ranchers as well as the order to fire crews to leave the gates open for the wild horses and burros passage to survive during the wildfire.

We would like to be updated regarding sightings of wild horses and burros with specifics on location and headcount.

Besides ranching what other multiple use is present on the Twin Peaks HMA? Will the wildfire be coming close to energy and or mining projects and therefore cause environmental pollution? How will this be mitigated?

Thank you for your kind assistance and your help to ensure wild horses and burros will be able to escape the fire.

Sincerely,
Anne Novak

Anne Novak
Executive Director
Protect Mustangs
P.O. Box 5661
Berkeley, California 94705

Previous email on this issue:

——– Original Message ——–
Subject: RE: Twin Peaks wildfire
From: “Fontana, Joseph J”
Date: Fri, August 17, 2012 8:48 am
To: Anne protectmustangs
Anne,

Sorry for delay.  Rush fire has been demanding.  It is unprecedented up here in size and extreme behavior.

As for the Mustangs:

As of Friday, Aug. 17, there have been no sightings of injured or deceased mustangs or burros.  A group of burros has been seen in an area that had been burned earlier during the fire, and they are safe.  Observers on a flight yesterday saw two small groups of healthy wild horses in unburned areas.  No other groups have been observed.  Resource specialists in the BLM Eagle Lake Field Office feel that prior to the fire the horses and burros most likely moved to higher ground as they left dried up water sources for fresh water sources.

Ranchers have been removing cattle from grazing allotments, and the BLM has directed them to leave gates left open to allow the horses and burros free passage across the range. The BLM has directed fire crews to leave gates open, and shares this message at twice daily briefings with the incident management team.

The BLM shares the concerns of those interested in the well-being and safety of wild horses and burros and is taking actions to ensure the animals are able to move throughout the HMA.

Public lands in the fire area have been closed to protect public safety.

Fire updates and maps are available at www.inciweb.com.

I have added you to the email list for fire updates

From: anne@protectmustangs.org
Sent: Thursday, August 16, 2012 3:55 PM
To: Fontana, Joseph J
Subject: Twin Peaks wildfire

Dear Jeff,

Please send me all the information about the Twin Peaks wildfire and let me know if you are taking fences down so the wild horses and burros can survive by moving out of harm’s way.

Best wishes,
Anne

Anne Novak
Executive Director
Protect Mustangs
P.O. Box 5661
Berkeley, California 94705

 

Wildfire in California herd management area

NorCal 2 Type II
Interagency Incident Management Team
Rush Fire
CA-BLM-NOD
Ravendale, California
Fire Information Office:
Staffed 8:00 am to 6:00 pm

For Immediate Release: August 17, 2012 @ 8:00 am

RUSH FIRE UPDATE

Started:  August 12, 2012 at 6:42 pm

Cause:  Lightning

Fuels:  Fire is burning in sagebrush, juniper, and grass

Estimated Size: 204,359 acres

Containment: 30%

Expected Containment: 8/22/2012

Committed Resources: Approximately 468 people

Structures Threatened: 36 (30 residences; 1 commercial; 5 outbuildings)

Structures Damaged or Destroyed: 1 (barn)

Injuries: 2 (both in fire camp)

Location: The fire is located on Bureau of Land Management (BLM), Northern California District (BLM-CA-NOD,) Eagle Lake Field Office, approximately 15 miles southeast of Ravendale, California.  The fire is burning near a major natural gas line and transfer station, and power transmission lines that supply the Reno area.

Summary:   The fire pushed south and east over the top of Skedaddle Mountain as well as spreading east of Observation Peak. Firefighters made good progress to secure the northwestern fire edge. Fire crews will continue to construct handline, dozer lines, and complete burnouts operations as conditions permit in an effort to further contain the fire.

Possible thunderstorm activity is in the forecast for the next two-three days. This fire has showed significant growth from thunder cell downdrafts on several occasions.

Voluntary evacuations of structures along eastern side of Highway 395.  Structure protection is being implemented by fire crews. Residents along Mail Route/County Road 502 and Garate Road were notified that voluntary evacuations for that area are in effect. The fire is currently within ½ mile of US Route (Highway) 395.  The public needs to be aware for the need of possible intermittent closures of Highway 395 due to fire activity and public safety.

Area and Road Closures in Effect: On August 16, the BLM issued a closure order for public lands in the fire area to protect public health and safety.  The closed area is bounded by Highway 395 on the west, the Sand Pass Road on the east, and the Wendel Road on the south.  The new northern boundary for the public land closure is the Juniper Ridge, Tuledad, Stage Road, Marr Road, and Buckhorn Road extending to Nevada Highway 447 in Washoe County. Routes closed within this closure area include the Ramhorn Springs, Rye Patch Road, Shinn Ranch, Stoney, Deep Cut, Smoke Creek, Skedaddle Ranch, Dry Valley, and Brubeck roads. The Ramhorn Springs Campground also is closed.

Travelers along the Highway 395 corridor, please use caution near the fire crews and equipment working in the fire area.  Highway 395 may be closed due to fire activity.  Please check for current road conditions with CalTrans at http://www.dot.ca.gov/cgi-bin/roads.cgi or 800-427-7623.

Remarks: Fire officials remind residents and visitors that fire restrictions are in effect for public lands and national forests in northeast California.  Campfires are permitted only in posted recreation sites.  Chainsaws may not be used after 1:00pm daily.

For additional fire information, go to InciWeb @ http://inciweb.org/incident/3151/ or follow us on Twitter @ https://twitter.com/NorCalTeam2.

 

11-year-old seeks to spur protection of wild horses and burros

Cross posted from the Las Vegas Review Journal

                                                              (Photo © Cynthia Smalley)
Special To View

 

Centennial Hills resident Robin Warren, 11, interacts with a gentled wild horse July 12 in Sparks. Robin has been an advocate for the protection of wild horses and burros for three years and is youth campaign director for the nonprofit group Protect Mustangs.

By Maggie Lillis
VIEW STAFF WRITER
Posted: Aug. 7, 2012 | 12:23 a.m.

One Centennial Hills 11-year-old has turned a nickname, Wild Mustang Robin, into a passion in motion.

Sixth-grader Robin Warren’s mission to protect indigenous horses and burros has garnered national and international attention, visits with legislators and a youth advocate title for a preservation group.

For three years, Robin has worked to raise awareness of the Free-Roaming Horses and Burros Act of 1971 and the Bureau of Land Management’s exemption to it.

She started a petition and gathered about 2,500 signatures to request that the BLM adhere to the same rules and regulations as the general public in regards to the humane treatment of wild horses and burros.

“We don’t want them to reduce their numbers or to have the horses’ watering holes polluted or herds run around by motorists,” Robin said. “I hope many people see my petition and understand the problem and issues and help us put a stop to this.”

Robin was introduced to the cause by the book “Mustang, Wild Spirit of the West,” written by Marguerite Henry and illustrated by Robert Lougheed. Her humanitarian spirit was also influenced by “The Puppy Place Special Edition: Puppy and Chica” by Ellen Miles due to its message about puppy mills, said Robin’s mother, Denise DeLucia.

“In the end of the book, it says how you can help, and it was to start a petition,” she said.

Robin obtained signatures from family, friends and patrons outside area libraries at first. She then made a Facebook page and a series of YouTube videos, and her pleas were viewed globally.

In one video, Robin addressed her peers when she sang, “Come on, you kids out there, sign my petition. You could be a world changer.”

DeLucia said Robin’s fervor hasn’t waned.

“I was taken aback by her zeal and determination,” she said. “I wasn’t sure how lasting it would be . You know how a child can be.”

DeLucia battled health troubles last summer, but Robin continued her fight.

“She encouraged me,” she said.

Robin’s videos were viewed by people in every state and 33 countries, DeLucia said.

A link to Robin’s horse petition is included in each video.

The videos caught the attention of Anne Novak, executive director of Protect Mustangs, a San Francisco Bay Area preservation group. The group’s mission is to educate the public about the American wild horse, protect and research wild horses on the range and help those that have lost their freedom, Novak said.

“I noticed her about two years ago and I saw how dedicated this young lady is,” Novak said. “She’s amazing and brilliant and a great wild horse advocate.”

Novak appointed Robin as Protect Mustang’s youth campaign director . She is to help with outreach, public appearances and political events.

Robin spoke about the issue with a Nevada senator and addressed crowds at a rally and press conference in front of the Sacramento Federal Courthouse last month.

“She had people in tears,” Novak said. “And she had a standing ovation. She’s a very strong voice for Protect Mustangs.”

Robin said her work with Protect Mustangs is fun and exciting.

“I’m very proud of her,” DeLucia said.

There have been massive removals of herds since 2009, Novak said, and a debate about the wild horse and burro population merits.

“We’re starting to get to a situation that is dire,” she said.

There is varied census information for indigenous horses and burros in the United States.

There were an estimated 51,000 horses in holding before the BLM’s Jackson Mountains Herd Management Area roundup in June, a controversial helicopter operation that gathered 424 wild horses.

There are an estimated 20,000 wild horses in 10 most Western states. Eighty percent of them live in Nevada, Novak said.

Wild horses and burros help sustain biodiversity in ecosystems and are a source of ecotourism, Novak said.

Protect Mustangs hopes to highlight the issues for a new generation via Robin.

“Robin is a wonderful leader and inspiration for kids,” Novak said. “It’s important that even though they aren’t voters, they will vote, and we want to have something left for them to see on a ballot.”

To view Robin’s online content, visit youtube.com/us.er/wildmustangrobin

For more information, visit protectmustangs.org

Link to article: http://www.lvrj.com/view/11-year-old-seeks-to-spur-protection-of-wild-horses-and-burros-165234416.html

Proposal for Wild Horse/Burro Reserve Design Project

 

Craig Downer

By Craig C. Downer, Wildlife Ecologist, Author: The Wild Horse Conspiracy (2012), Member: IUCN Species Survival Commission, and president of Andean Tapir Fund, P.O. Box 456, Minden, NV 89423. T. 775-901-2094. ccdowner@aol.com

 

August 1st, 2012

Unless urgent action is taken, wild horses and burros in today’s America face a bleak future. Though the unanimously passed Wild Free-Roaming Horses and Burros Act of 1971 originally should have set aside around 88-million acres for their preservation in the wild, the rights of these animals and their public supporters have been undermined and denied by the very officials charged with protecting them. Current policies toward these national heritage species are thinly disguised plans for either bringing them down to cripplingly low, non-viable population levels or for totally eliminating them from their legal areas. Even if some 30,000 wild horses and burros remain on the public lands, this figure is in no way commeasurable with the amount of ecologically appropriate habitat in which they have the legal right to live. The small number our government intends to leave when divided into around 200 remaining areas is resulting in an over fragmentation of populations that jeopardizes their long-term survival. Our government’s current goal is drastically reducing already tiny and genetically vulnerable wild herds and involves their partial sterilization through PZP injection of mares and the unnatural skewing of sex ratios to establish excess males (in this naturally harem type horse society!). Today, our nation’s last remaining wild horses and burros find themselves in a very critical situation and are actually more imperiled than they were in 1971. For their chief enemies reside within the very agencies charged with their protection!

To remedy this intolerable situation, the people of America must immediately & audaciously respond with a well-conceived plan for change. As a wildlife ecologist & fourth-generation Nevadan personally familiar with the wild horses & burros of the West, I here present a way to restore these returned native species as viable natural herds throughout the West and to obviate those cruel, disruptive roundups and reproductive manipulations that are only making a mockery of the Act and – of principal concern – causing an untold loss of freedom, suffering & death to the horses & burros themselves.

Wildlife, wilderness & conservation professionals call this strategy Reserve Design. Reserve Design combines both ecological/social/political considerations in order to achieve desirable results. Basically, wild horse/burro Reserve Design involves the setting aside of areas of wild-equid-containing, year-round habitat where human intervention is strictly controlled/buffered against & where natural processes are allowed to reestablish natural checks & balances. In this way, a significant degree of internal harmony is achieved for all diverse yet interrelated species within the ecosystem in question.

Critical Steps for Realizing Reserve Design to be Described in the Project are:

[1] Properly identify the survival requirements of the principal species to be accommodated in the reserve. These would be considered both to achieve short- and

1long-term survival. Our chief focus would be to promote a wild horse/burro-containing ecosystem, where all species are allowed to adapt naturally over the generations. [2] Conscientiously identify appropriate geographical areas suitable for the implementation of wild horse/burro-containing reserves. This would involve travel.

[3] Wisely incorporate natural equid predators, such as puma and wolf, that would both limit and tone wild horse and burro populations. [4] Wisely incorporate natural barriers that would limit the ingress and/or the egress of certain species, including the wild horses and burros. This would avoid conflicts and set up conditions for the natural self-regulation of populations.

[4] Identify where buffer zones, artificial barriers, or other means of impeding movements in and out of a reserve should be established in order to keep the species in question from coming into conflict. Buffer zones possibly involving non-injurious means of adverse conditioning could be employed. Also, “semi-permeable barriers” that do not restrict most species but do prevent equids from passing out of the reserve may be used. [5] Identify the presence and abundance of necessary food, water, shelter, mineral procurement sites, elevational gradients for seasonal migrations, etc., that will accommodate the long-term needs of viable wild equid populations & allow the natural rest-rotation of grazing and foraging between the natural subdivisions of the reserve. [6] Identify geographical regions whose human inhabitants are benignly disposed toward the creation & long-term implementation of extensive, ecologically balanced wild horse/burro-containing reserves. This would involve travel and town meetings. [7] Identify ways of and benefits from implementing Reserve Design that would result in win-win relationships centered around the presence of wild horses and burros. Ecotourism is one major possibility here. And restoring native ecosystems, including soils & native species, is another major benefit. The reduction of flammable vegetation through equid grazing & the restoration of hydrographic basins through enrichment of soils are major positive contributions. Indeed, the restoration of the “equid element” in North America is crucial to combating the life-disrupting Global Warming itself. [8] Identify how best to educate the public concerning the many ways that horses & burros have of self-limiting their own populations once their respective ecological niches are filled. This is due to their being ecological “climax” species. This knowledge is key to our realizing a truly humane relationship with wild horses and burros in America.

This does not exhaust all the considerations for soundly establishing a Reserve Design that I would include in my professionally researched proposal. If provided the requested support, I would further elaborate upon this important and timely plan.

Basic steps for a Professional Reserve Design, with associated costs & durations:

[1] Review literature on Reserve Design. Consult government, private and non-profit organizations. Research university, government & public libraries, World Wide Web. [2] Consult authorities on Reserve Design and official implementers of nature reserves. Visit government and university offices and conduct interviews, particularly the BLM and USFS. Universities to be visited: University of California-Berkeley, Stanford University, Colorado State University-Ft. Collins, University of Colorado-Boulder, University of Nevada-Reno. {I received my A.B. from UCB & my M.S. from UNR & am a lifetime alumni at both.} Visit U.S. Fish & Wildlife offices, particularly national

2

wildlife refuges (NWR) containing or involving wild horses, especially Sheldon-Hart NWR in n. Nevada & s. Oregon and Malheur NWR in SE Oregon. My visit to the Malheur would be in combination with a visit to the Steen Mountain National Conservation Area. This is home to the famous Kiger mustang herd that spills east into the Alvord Desert. I would visit the Montgomery Pass wild horse herd on the NV-CA border near Bishop, the Cibola-Trigo and Cerbat wild horse herds in AZ, as well as Utah’s Sulphur wild horse herd. The first two herds are believed by many to be naturally self-stabilizing. National Parks offices & the parks themselves that have a history or actual presence of wild horses & burros would also be visited. These would include Grand Canyon, Death Valley & eastern CA portions of the Mojave Desert & the National Conservation Area here. Also included would be Theodore Roosevelt National Monument in ND, for its authentic old Indian pony herd. Various non-profit groups would be consulted, especially the International Society for the Preservation of Mustangs & Burros in Lantry, SD, in combination with my trip to Theodore Roosevelt N.M., & The Cloud Foundation of Colorado Springs, CO, in combination with visiting the Pryor Mountain Wild Horse Range & Bighorn Canyon National Recreation Area, WY & MT. [3] Intensive survey of maps & documents concerning BLM & US Forest lands as well as other appropriate & especially adjoining land where wild horses and burros are presently found or could reasonably be established as per Section 6 of the WFHBA. This phase will identify those regional centers of actual or potential wild horse/burro presence that would be most appropriate for Reserve Design. I would consult with those most familiar with regions being considered as appropriate for Reserve Design.

Duration for 1, 2 & 3: 2 months.

[4] Final composition of Reserve Design proposal. This would subsequently be presented to the public and to government as well as private entities. I would give presentations to legislative and executive branches of both state and national governments as well as to the BLM and US Forest Service – the two agencies charged with carrying out the mandate of the WFRHB Act. I would also address counties & cities.

Duration for 4: 1 month. Total Time Required: 3 months.

The robust aim of Reserve Design is to restore wild horses and burros where they belong throughout America and to secure their long-term future. This would, in effect, restore the true and original intent of the Wild Free-Roaming Horses and Burros Act of 1971.

Total Budget: 3 months x $3,333 per month = $9,999. To include all expenses involved with travel/lodging/communications/information retrieval/map/copying, etc.

Terms: One half of sum, or $4,999.50, due to Craig C. Downer upon initiation of project. One half of sum, or $4,999.50,due to Craig C. Downer upon completion of project. Unless otherwise indicated, full acknowledgement of supporter(s) will be in proposal.

3

Wild Horse and Burro Bait-Trapping: Going … Going … Gone

Cross- posted August 5, 2012 by ppjg

Grandma Gregg

___________________________________________________________

A MINIMUM of 8,900 Wild Horses and Burros will be bait-trapped on our public land this year. And this is in addition to the thousands that will be rounded up by helicopter….

The Bureau of Land Management (BLM) has divided the western states into six zones and private contractors bid on and received a contract for one or more zones. Each contractor is required by their agreement to capture a minimum amount of wild horses and/or burros in the zone. The MAXIMUM number of wild horses and burros that may be gathered is actually higher than the number that exists on their federally protected Herd Management Areas. The BLM reported that in the 2012 fiscal year there were only 37,294 wild horses and burros remaining on the range, but they have contracted to remove up to 44,000 from bait-trapping alone. So while the BLM feigns interest in humane care and concern for out Wild Horses and Burros, these BLM contracts continue on their fast-moving “managing for extinction”.

Link to BLM population estimate:

Here are the July 2012 through June 2013 bait-trapping contractor awards per the federal business opportunity webpage:

Company Zone Minimum Maximum Horse Trappers Zone 14002,000

Desert Hill Construction Zone 35002,000

Mt. Taylor Zones 3 and 68004,000

Warner (worked for Cattoor) Zones 1-62,40012,000

Sampson (worked for Cattoor) Zones 1-62,40012,000

Cattoor*Zones 1-62,40012,000 Totals 8,90044,000

Cattoor – no zone(s) indicated so assume all 6 zones thus minimum per contract would demand 2,400 and maximum would be 12,000. (see links for details)

Link to the map of proposed bait-trap zones

Using the above trapping contractor awards which have a minimum and maximum number per yearly contract the number of Wild Horses and Burros that will be trapped over this next year is at MINIMUM 8,900 and a shocking maximum of 44,000 which is of serious concern since most informed people outside of the BLM believe there are only about 20,000 Wild Horses and Burros that remain on our public lands today.

The fact is that the United States Forest Service and BLM have already been bait-trapping and can apparently do it without a new NEPA process if the previous Environmental Assessment is still in good standing or the Range Management Plan states the designated Appropriate Management Level for a herd’s population.  This already happened last winter at the Harney Oregon BLM office when they explained that the bait-trapping they were doing was a part of a clean up procedure after a helicopter roundup – and without any new public notice.

Knowing that the contractors have a free ticket and get paid by the “head” the number of Wild Horse and Burros that will be captured between now and next June will likely go far beyond the minimum 8,900. Future populations will suffer as if it isn’t already bad enough. It’s all about the money for these contractors – nothing else. The BLM has now given the authority to private contractors to capture and remove thousands of Wild Horses and Burros, without the public even knowing exactly how many, where and when they will be doing it. Scary thought.

Now let’s think about the foals – there will no longer be a moratorium for capture during the high foaling season. And what about the old ones who know nothing about being domesticated and everything about being wild? How the young and old will suffer is beyond comprehension and hidden from the public eye.

Now let’s think about accountability and transparency. It has long been highly suspected and documented that many Wild Horses and Burros end up going to slaughter as they disappear into the BLM pipeline of no accountability.
Will they count them at the trap site or are they counted when delivered to holding facility? BLM already sells hundreds and hundreds of our Wild Horses and Burros to questionable persons; how will we know where they go after the trap site…who is to say that some won’t be delivered to “buyers” before they are even in the hands of the BLM?

No plan for public observers has been mentioned for most trapping and BLM has even stated in the trapping contract that there will be no public allowed. In summary it states, “due to this type of operation spectators and viewers will be prohibited …”

How will you and I know how the animals are treated? We have all seen the documented proof of animal abuse at the hands of roundup contractors … and that was WITH public observers, so what can we expect without observers? The contract even states that the contractor can use electric prod hot shots and heaven only knows what other abuse these animals will be dealt behind our backs.

Mark my words…bait-trapping will capture what the helicopter roundups miss and will eventually be the end of our Wild Horses and Burros in the wild. Lets face it… bait- trapping is NOT the BLM being nice to the Wild Horses and Burros, but it is the most recent scheme designed to zero them out.

Greed from the livestock, oil and gas, and mining interests are destroying our public lands and its wildlife, water, and of course our nations Wild Horses and Burros.

Bait-trapping could be the end of our wild horses and burros if we fail to stand up and pay attention to the big picture. Once our Wild Horses and Burros are taken off our public lands…they will be gone forever.

__________________________________________________________________

Much more information:
http://rtfitchauthor.com/2012/03/29/blm-seeks-bids-for-new-type-of-contracts-to-remove-protected-wild-horses-for-replacement-with-private-cattle-on-pubic-lands/
Contractor Award:
https://www.fbo.gov/?s=opportunity&mode=form&tab=core&id=a28636927a552b993e4e8fcefb51b210&_cview=0
Contractor Award:
https://www.fbo.gov/?s=opportunity&mode=form&id=ce262d931c4384f5cab27c32de54a347&tab=core&_cview=0
Roundup Schedule 2012:
http://www.blm.gov/wo/st/en/prog/whbprogram/herd_management/tentative_gather_schedule.html

http://on.doi.gov/GYyFqZ

http://www.blm.gov/pgdata/etc/medialib/blm/wo/Planning_and_Renewable_Resources/wild_horses_and_burros/statistics_and_maps.Par.13260.File.dat/HAHMAstats2012Final.pdf

Immunocontraceptives: Tomorrow’s birth control?

Protect Mustangs is against using PZP and other immunocontraceptives on wild horses and burros at this time because it has not been proven that the herds are overpopulating nor damaging the thriving natural ecological balance and it appears to be risky.

The Bureau of Land Management’s (BLM) Appropriate Management Level (AML) is skewed ridiculously low to appease the public land mining, ranching and energy interests. Livestock is permitted on wild horse rangelands with livestock outnumbering wild horses and burros at more than 50 to 1.

We are very concerned about the low wild horse and burro population levels–estimated at less than 18,000 for the entire West–due to 3 years of roundup rampage.

Roundups will continue in order to administer fertility control unless they are permanently sterilizing the wild horses during roundups now.

Darting is not only a biohazard but is also impractical on rough terrain unless the BLM or their agents are chasing wild horses in helicopters to shoot them with the drug. Chasing herds is cruel.

The 1971 Act made it illegal to chase wild horses and burros with aircraft. Sadly The Act has been whittled away by enemies of the American wild horse and burro. Protect Mustangs is against helicopter roundups and terrorizing wild herds by chasing them over rough terrain where foals have their feet run off and die.

Predators, such as mountain lions, are reducing the population the way nature intended. We support allowing predators on the range.

Immunocontraceptives appear to have many drawbacks that you will read about in the article below. Most studies are paid to prove the drugs are OK so it’s important to notice the negative aspects for a more accurate perspective.

Fertility control is a billion dollar business for the human market. One must question the ethics of using America’s icons as lab rats.

 
Cross-posted  from Pennmidwifery

By Bonnie Urquhart, R.N.

Native Wild Horses in Utah (Photo © Cynthia Smalley, all rights reserved)

Feral mares grazing on Assateague, a barrier island off the Maryland coast, benefit from a contraceptive strategy that would leave many women envious. Their fertility is curbed by a method that employs neither hormones nor devices, but instead convinces the immune system to target reproductive components and render them inactive. Derived from the ova of pigs, the porcine zona pellucida (PZP) vaccine has been administered annually via dart gun to regulate the fertility of these fast-breeding animals since 1988.

An immunized mare comes into come into heat and mates as usual, but as soon as she ovulates, her immune system considers her endogenous zona pellucida foreign and spackles it with antibodies, blocking fertilization with an effectiveness rate of 90-100 percent (Kirkpatrick, Turner, Liu, Fayrer-Hosken, & Rutberg, 1997). Immunocontraception does not alter the normal reproductive behavior of these horses, is usually reversible if used for less than seven years, and does not appear to harm unborn foals if the mother is accidentally injected while pregnant. Until this approach was developed, feral horse overpopulation was a chronic headache for wildlife biologists determined to keep the large animals from outstripping their food supply and outcompeting native wildlife.

Vaccination against pregnancy is itself a unique concept. Traditional vaccines are derived from foreign proteins that sensitize the body to fight off microbial invaders. Immunocontraceptives reprogram the body to attack part of itself by attaching it to a foreign, non-tolerated molecule (Sprenger, 1995) (Schrater, 1995). By focusing on different target molecules, researchers can prime the immune system to thwart the production and transport of gametes, disturb the interaction of the gametes that leads to fertilization, or interfere with implantation. Zona pellucida vaccines focus on what may be the ideal target-the translucent glycoprotein extracellular matrix, surrounding all mammalian ova, that sperm must penetrate to achieve fertilization.

Nearly 100 species have been successfully contracepted with PZP vaccines, including rabbits, dogs, deer, elephants, gray seals, and non-human primates, as well as amphibians and fish. “Its application to wildlife…has been spectacular. We are fourteen years down the road with wildlife and it comes close to being the perfect agent,” says Dr. Jay Kirkpatrick, reproductive physiologist and developer of the PZP vaccine used today for wildlife management (personal communication, October 23, 2001).

Zona pellucida vaccines were being for considered for human contraceptive use long before Kirkpatrick’s research group adapted it for wildlife. Around the time it gained favor with wildlife biologists, researchers seeking human application were becoming quite discouraged. Native pig protein was not suitable for human use, and researchers were unable to develop an effective recombinant or synthetic form of human ZP (Kirkpatrick, 2001). Molecular biologists could synthesize the protein backbone of the molecule, but not the carbohydrate components. Without the carbohydrates, the vaccine would trigger immune response, but could not block fertilization.

Another problem is the vaccine’s tendency to become irreversible over time. Immature eggs within the ovaries are also surrounded by zona pellucida. An agent that sensitizes the woman against zona pellucida not only would cause her body to attack its mature ova at ovulation, but could also provoke an immune attack on her immature egg cells and inflammatory destruction of the ovary itself, causing permanent infertility (Feng, Sandlow, Sparks, & Sandra 1999) (Richter, 1996).

Adverse autoimmune reactions resulting in disruption of folliculogenesis and depletion in the primordial follicle pool have been observed in the ovaries of mice (Patterson, Jennings, van Duin, & Aitkin, 2000). Mares, rabbits, and dogs maintained on long-term PZP have sometimes shown abnormal hormonal profiles and altered estrus cycles. A wild mare vaccinated for three years might take between one and six years to regain fertility. After seven years, she may become permanently infertile. Women who desire a reversible method would find this effect unacceptable, but clinicians might someday find zona pellucida vaccines an attractive option for women who have finished childbearing.

Human immunocontraceptive research is not new. At least twelve studies in the 1920s and 1930s evaluated immunocontraception in the human female, but the trials were not successful and “unspecified ethical restrictions” ended the research (Richter, 1996). Better understanding of immune function and molecular biology has revived interest in immunocontraceptive research over the past two decades.

The most suitable candidates for contraceptive vaccine development are molecules on the surface of the gametes or on the fertilized ovum and early embryo and the hormones hCG and GnRH. Anti-gamete vaccines are the most attractive option because they do not disrupt an embryo after fertilization or alter the hormonal balance, but researchers have so far been unable to reliably block fertilization without introducing cross-reactions with other tissues (Schrater, 1995).

Bringing a product from the laboratory to the pharmacy is a long and expensive process, and funding sources are limited (Klitsch, 1995). After selecting a target molecule for study, biologists must isolate, characterize, and synthesize effective molecules from sperm or ova; understand mechanisms by which the immune system blocks fertility; develop an effective, benign adjuvant; create reliable, inexpensive tests to monitor fertility status in immunized individuals; and carefully evaluate the product for immunological and other side-effects (O’Rand & Lea, 1997) To market an effective immunocontraceptive, developers must progress from creating the vaccine in the laboratory to preclinical studies to clinical trials (Feng, Sandlow, Sparks, & Sandra 1999).

Because research and development are costly and regulatory obstacles to new drugs are forbidding, any pharmaceutical company that puts an immunocontraceptive on the market is likely to emphasize its effectiveness, play down adverse findings, and energetically court clinicians with free samples and gadgets. Artfully crafted advertisements will spark public excitement over this innovative contraceptive method, and as a result patients will request the medication without understanding much about its action. The CNM will serve as intermediary between hyperbole and hope, keeping clients grounded in reality as they discuss benefits and possible adverse outcomes.

Vaccines targeting human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG) show a higher likelihood of success than many other immunocontraceptive projects. Produced by the embryo to sustain progesterone production, hCG allows the pregnancy to establish and maintain itself. If antibodies disable the hCG molecule, progesterone drops and uterine endometrium sheds, preventing implantation. Because the result is loss of an early pregnancy, anti-abortionists strongly oppose developing an effective hCG vaccine and block U.S. government grants that would speed research (Klitsch, 1995). By 1995, three prototype hCG vaccines had undergone limited clinical trials in women (Schrater, 1995). The initial three injections lasted about 6 months, and did not affect menstrual cycles.

Unfortunately, the chemical similarity of hCG to luteinizing hormone (LH), follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH), and thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) apparently induces cross-reactions elsewhere in the hormonal system. Blocking some hormones and interfering with feedback mechanisms could conceivably wreak endocrine havoc, perhaps irreparably damaging the thyroid and the pituitary glands (Feng, Sandlow, Sparks, & Sandra 1999) (Richter,1996). The vaccinated woman would produce and then attack reproductive hormones, continuously creating immune complexes that could cause tissue damage. Or perhaps this reaction would prove to be benign; in short-term clinical trials of the hCG vaccine, all subjects developed cross-reactive antibodies to LH, and all continued to cycle normally. Female rhesus monkeys immunized repeatedly for seven years with ovine (sheep) LH became infertile but continued to ovulate, had regular menstrual cycles, and maintained normal pituitary function (Schrater, 1995).

Higher on the hypothalamic-pituitary-ovarian axis is gonadotropin- releasing hormone (GnRH), the hormone that spearheads the production of sex steroids in both men and women. The National Institute of Immunology and the Population Control Council have tested a GnRH vaccine on human subjects, including breastfeeding women (Schrater, 1995). The result is effective-but dramatic. The GnRH vaccine essentially effects non-surgical castration, halting testosterone production in men (with accompanying impotence and loss of body hair) and effecting menopause in women (Richter,1996). Hormonal supplements could remedy the deficit, but consumers are unlikely to find this approach acceptable. This technology would be more applicable to veterinary medicine, making possible non-traumatic spaying and castration and in wildlife biology the reduction of, say, deer herds in suburban neighborhoods where hunting is not feasible. Trials of GnRH vaccines on Norway rats resulted in 100 percent sterility in both sexes (Miller, 1997).

Potentially promising are experimental vaccines that target male FSH receptor proteins, inducing men to produce low-quality sperm incapable of fertilization but sparing them the need for exogenous testosterone supplementation. Other biologists have targeted prostaglandinF2, oxytocin, and structural placental antigens (Feng, Sandlow, Sparks, & Sandra 1999). It is the advanced practice nurse who must serve as the intermediary between technology and the client, translating technical information and exploring treatment options while considering the safety of the product.

Vaccines triggering an immune response against sperm could be used by either men or women. Laboratories have experimented with structural and functional antigens on the sperm itself, and with spermatic enzymes. Target specificity is the stumbling block-an immune response that incapacitates sperm also tends to induce the immune system to attack other organs and tissues as well.

With immunocontraceptives, there is often a reciprocal relationship between specificity and effectiveness. If a vaccine is very specific to one small antigen, there is little danger that the immune system will attack similar targets, but contraceptive action is ineffective. An agent that targets several components is much more effective, but the immune response is likely to involve other tissues. The immune system is intimately connected to every part of the body. The potential for an untoward autoimmune response is great, and tissue injury may be difficult to prevent. But perhaps this damage is purely theoretical: anti-sperm antibodies frequently occur in vasectomized men and some women spontaneously become immune to sperm with no identifiable systemic damage (Schrater, 1995) (Diekman & Herr, 1997). Women sometimes develop immune responses against their own zona pellucida as well, and seem to suffer no other ill effects (Schrater, 1995).

Kirkpatrick reports that Assateague mares, freed from the stress of pregnancy and lactation, have enjoyed improved health since the vaccine program started (Barber &Frayer-Hosken, 2000). Studies in horses and dogs show that although ovarian damage occurs, the PZP antibodies in a vaccinated animal do not cross-react with major organ systems such as the brain, heart, and urinary tract (Barber & Frayer-Hosken, 2000). Research with horses and other animals indicates that offspring born to previously contracepted mares, and even mares who were accidentally vaccinated while pregnant, appear normal and go on to produce normal foals themselves. Damage to human fetuses might be more subtle, perhaps manifesting in a chronically overstimulated or sluggish immune system or in hormonal anomalies that might not appear until puberty. We just do not know.

Potential lawsuits make domestic pharmaceutical companies reluctant to engage in immunocontraceptive research, but several companies around the world are optimistic. Canadian biotech firm Immucon has a patent for a male immunocontraceptive vaccine that neutralizes sperm fertilizing capacity by targeting a crucial zona pellucida sperm-binding protein at the level of the epididymus. The company expects to market the vaccine between 2005 and 2007. Immucon believes that reversible male immunocontraceptives will be an $850 million-a-year industry worldwide, and female immunocontraceptives will be worth $990 million a year (Immucon, 2001). Liability reform may encourage the pharmaceutical industry to conduct more contraceptive research (Klitsch, 1995).

Researchers are also exploring injectable agents that could render a man or woman permanently sterile. This could eliminate the pain and expense of tubal ligation or vasectomy while effectively ending childbearing.

Four out of every ten pregnancies in the world are unplanned-80 million a year (AGI,1997). The World Health Organization estimates that between eight million and 30 million unplanned pregnancies are the result of inconsistent or incorrect use of contraceptive methods or from method-related failure, and 120 to 150 million married women want to limit or space their pregnancies but lack the information and services to do so. Worldwide, 55,000 unsafe abortions take place every day, 95 percent of them in developing countries. Every day, more than 200 women die from these procedures (http://www.who.int/archives/whday/en/pages1998/whd98_10.html.). Optimally spaced and planned pregnancies benefit the health of both mothers and children. World population is expected to reach 10 billion by the year 2050, and overpopulation can lead to poverty, famine, disease, depletion of resources, and environmental degradation (Feng, Sandlow, Sparks, & Sandra 1999).

A safe, reliable immunocontraceptive agent could be the family planning strategy of choice for women in developing countries. Proper implementation, however, could strain resources. Clinicians must perform pregnancy tests before immunization and periodically screen recipients to verify that the vaccine is still effective.

If the perfect immunocontraceptive is developed, there would be tremendous potential for misuse and coercion by population-control programs to reduce the birth rate of the poor, non-whites, and people in Third World countries (Richter,1996). (Schrater, 1995). Judith Richter writes in The Ecologist “within this conceptual framework, birth control is regarded as a weapon of war against the ‘teeming multitudes,’ a war in which people are treated as mere numbers or statistics to be controlled, manipulated reduced and dispensed with” (Richter,1996, page 58). The reproductive rights of individuals could become secondary to the perceived need of the population as a whole.

There have been many documented cases of IUD insertion and sterilization procedures carried out without a woman’s knowledge or consent. Immunocontraception would make it much easier to surreptitiously render a woman infertile. Clinics could administer long-acting contraceptive vaccines to uninformed, unaware patients who think the injection is for protection against disease. Some immunocontraceptive agents, such as anti-sperm vaccines, could sensitize a woman for life, and it is likely she would never know that her inability to conceive was artificially induced. (Richter,1996).

Population-control programs usually focus on women because they are the ones who become pregnant. The subordinate status of women in much of the world makes them less likely to resist coercive fertility regulation policies. Conversely, state-imposed vasectomy programs in China and India led to social unrest and the downfall of a government (Schrater, 1995).

Immunocontraceptive clinical trails show great variability in effectiveness although research subjects are healthy, well-nourished individuals in supervised health-care settings. How effective will these vaccines be when used on anemic, malnourished people with little access to care? Immune response varies greatly between individuals and even within an individual, and the duration of protection from pregnancy may be difficult to predict. Individuals with the tendency towards allergies and autoimmune disease could experience an exaggerated reaction that might render them permanently infertile (Richter,1996). Diseases that suppress immunity might reduce the effectiveness of the vaccine.

Researchers talk of developing a finger-stick kit that could be used in the home so that vaccine recipients could monitor their own fertility status and use additional protection if titers are low. It is unclear how feasible these kits would be in Third World counties with few health care supplies.

The ideal immunocontraceptive would be a highly effective, fully reversible vaccine effective for a predictable period. Today’s immunocontraceptives are prototypes in need of improved formulation that will give longer acting, reliable responses with little chance of cross reaction, and offer a high level of protection against pregnancy. Our knowledge of molecular biology grows daily. New vaccine technology may soon isolate target antigens that are much different from the substances synthesized now, creating a safe, effective product that will change the lives of millions. The leadership of nurse midwives will help clients process information and make informed decisions about contraceptive vaccines when they begin to reach the market.

References

Alan Guttmacher Institute. (1997). Issues in Brief: The Role of Contraception in Reducing Abortion. New York: Alan Guttmacher Institute.

Barber, M. Frayer-Hosken, R. (2000). Possible Mechanisms of Mammalian Immunocontraception. Journal of Reproductive Immunology 46 (2): 103-24.

Diekman, Herr, J. (1997). Sperm antigens and their use in the development of an immunocontraceptive. American Journal of Reproductive Immunology 37(1): 111-117.

“Contraception Update” (1998). FHI’s Contraceptive update: Experimental male methods inhibit sperm Quarterly Health Bulletin Network

Feng, H. Sandlow, J. Sparks, A., Sandra, A. (1999). Development of an immunocontraceptive vaccine: current status. Journal of Reproductive Medicine 44 (9): 759-765.

Kirkpatrick, J., Turner, J.W., Liu, I.K., Fayrer-Hosken, R., Rutberg, A.T. (1997). Case studies in wildlife immunocontraception: Wild and feral equids and white-tailed deer. Reproduction, Fertility, and Development. 9 (1): 105-110.

Kirkpatrick, J. (October 23, 2001) Personal communication with author.

Klitsch, M. (1995). Still waiting for the contraceptive revolution. Family Planning Perspectives 27 (6).

Miller, L., Johns, B.E., Elias, D.J., Crane, K.A,. (1997). Comparative efficacy of two immunocontraceptive vaccines. Vaccine 15 (17-18): 1858-62.

Moudgal, N.R., Jeyakumar, M., Krishnamurthy, H., Sridhar, S., Martin, F. (1997). Development of a male contraceptive vaccine-a perspective. Human Reproduction Update 3 (4): 335-46.

O’Rand, M., Lea, I. (1997). Designing an effective immunocontraceptive. Journal of Reproductive Immunology 36: 51-59.

Patterson, M. Jennings, Z.A., van Duin, M., Aitkin, R.J. (2000). Immunocontraception with zona pellucida proteins. Cells Tissues Organs 166 (2): 228-32.

Richter, J. (1996). “Vaccination” against pregnancy: The politics of contraceptive research. The Ecologist 26 (2): 53-61.

Schrater, A. (1995). Immunization to regulate fertility: biological and cultural frameworks. Social Science and Medicine 41 (5): 14.

Sprenger, U. (1995). Challenging the immune system, the development of anti-fertility vaccines. Biotechnology and Development Monitor 25: 2-5.

World Health Organization. (1998). World health day/Safe motherhood, 7 April 1998: Address unsafe abortion [Online] http://www.who.int/archives/whday/en/pages1998/whd98_10.html.

2001 Bonnie S. Urquhart

dawnhorse3@home.com
www.eohippus.net

Protect Mustangs wants wild horses protected on The New Energy Frontier–not wiped out

Wise wild stallion (Photo © Cynthia Smalley, all rights reserved.)

Three years ago, epic scale wild horse roundups began across the West. A new force of advocates united with seasoned wild horse warriors in an effort to stop the cruel roundups and raise awareness.

It was clear the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) wanted to quickly stampede as many mustangs as possible off public land forever.

What was the rush?

Curiously, while working at The Cloud Foundation, I noticed a distinct trail of roundups . . .  After much research and investigation I learned the Ruby Pipeline was bashing through the same areas that wild horses were being removed.

El Paso Gas and the BLM denied there was any connection.

The roundups continued at break neck speed across the West spurring nationwide protests. Regrettably public outcry was ignored.

The White House remained mute on the wild horse crises.

Sadly even Sheryl Crow, messenger of the mustangs, could not inspire President Obama to save America’s wild horses.

Who else could the American people reach out to? The Queen of England? Don’t laugh too hard–it was considered at one point.

Later I realized the stimulus Package deadline was the catalyst and energy was the reason.

While watching the 2010 State of the Union Briefing I heard President Obama introduce The New Energy Frontier. Immediately it all made sense once the conflicts were exposed.

Last Saturday the New York Times published a great article by Eric Lipton, Drillers in Utah Have a Friend in a U.S. Land Agency. The article exposes the BLM’s  intimate relationship to the energy industry.

“Grazing, wildlife, along with threatened and endangered species — they commingle here,” Mr. Stringer said in an interview, waving his hand across a map of northeastern Utah in his office. “But oil and gas — that’s the major use.”

Read the article here: http://www.nytimes.com/2012/07/28/us/politics/bureau-of-land-managements-divided-mission.html?_r=4&hp

Today we offer the win-win solution for wild horses to remain on public land to foster biodiversity, in genetically viable herds, while inspiring the public because they live in freedom. There is a way for mustangs and burros to stay on their legally designated rangelands and coexist with livestock, while the rich grow their fortunes through energy development.

Perhaps the energy moguls could do the right thing–before it’s too late . . .

 

~ Anne Novak, Executive Director for Protect Mustangs