Ecologist sounds alarm–wild horses and burros are disappearing in the West

PM Photo Craig Downer

Concern for Montgomery Pass Wild Horse Territory (Inyo National Forest, CA) and Marietta Wild Burro Range (Bureau of Land Management, Carson City District Office, NV) and for Wild Horses and Burros Everywhere

By Craig C. Downer, Wildlife Ecologist

December 31st, 2014

During the 28th and 29th of December of present eventful 2014 (just reported by ABC News to have been the warmest year for planet Earth in human recorded history), I made my way south from where I live near Minden, Nevada, to one of the most spectacular and dramatic spots on Earth. This lies just east of the mighty Sierra Nevada mountains and Mammoth Lakes, just south of the surreal, vast, salty Mono Lake, and just to the west and north of the august White Mountains, home to some of the oldest living trees on Earth: the Bristlecone Pines, whose ancient presence can be palpably felt.

Since I was a boy, I have been coming to this intriguing place … to soak in its profuse and invigorating mineral waters, to thrill in beholding and even climbing its hoary, dramatically rising mountain tops, etc., etc., over and over again throughout the years, that now seem to spin by so rapidly. And it is unnerving to realize that these magnificent landscapes are underlain by a vast and deep pool of molten magma that reaches very near the surface here, causing many tremors and ground swells. Indeed, the Mono Craters I pass by coming south between Lee Vining, CA, and Benton Hot Springs, CA, were recently active, geologically speaking, and could again erupt at any time. California State Route 120 assumes a roller-coaster effect about midway between US Highway 395 on the west and US Highway 6 on the east due to the unpredictable surgings and subsidings of this vast, molten pool close under the Earth, as my nephew Dr. Chris Sanders discovered during his Ph.D. work at Cal Tech University. At 13,141 feet elevation a.s.l., Boundary Peak in the White Mountains is the tallest in Nevada. The ecosystem here is in the rain shadow of the Sierra Nevada to the west, one of whose peaks: Mount Whitney at 14,414 feet is the highest in the lower 48 states. So It is little wonder that the prevailing storms coming off the Pacific Ocean to the west dump most of their rain in California while what remains of the clouds lightly pass over Nevada and the rest of the Great Basin on their way to the Rocky Mountains. This makes for an austere desert with low precipitation of ca. 8 inches on average per year, higher in the mountains and lower in the valleys; and there is a gradation, or ecological transition, from mountain alpine meadow, to forest to semi forest-bush slopes to dry, sparsely bush-and grass-covered valleys in this “ecotonal” transition zone.

It is an exciting place to be for anyone consciously attuned to the vast dramas Nature plays out here and a perfect habitat for the returned North American native horse and burro species, certain individuals of which have reverted to their wild, naturally living way of life on their not-too-distant ancestors’ home stomping grounds of countless generations. Indeed, they are like the very reincarnations of these – and who is to say they may not be in truth be just such returning presences?

These are not ruminant digesters, but post-gastric, or caecal, digesters, and their feces contribute greatly to the ecosystem both by adding more vital humus and more intact, germinable seeds of a greater variety of plant species when compared to that/those contributed by the ruminant grazers here of the bovid (cattle, sheep) and cervid (deer, elk) mammal families.

Horse and burro fossils including petrified tracks in this area are found in great abundance and date from recent times to a few or even many millions of years Before Present. Indeed, I have discovered a petroglyph of a horse without rider that I judge to be between one and three thousand years old, based on the patina of weathering on the hard rock surface and similarly dated petroglyphs of spirals, bighorn sheep, snakes, etc., found nearby. I took care to document it again with my digital camera. It is Figure 1 in the 2014 edition of my book: The Wild Horse Conspiracy (www.amazon.com/dp/1461068983).

In February, 2010, I also trekked in to observe the ancient fossilized horse hoof prints in Death Valley National Park just to the south of here. Dating between 2-million and 3-million years, these occur alongside the tracks of such dramatic characters as the Dire Wolf, Sabre-Toothed Tiger/Cat, Thunder Bird, and Woolly Mammoth.

It is exasperating that neither Death Valley N.P. nor Inyo N.F, nor Carson City BLM give much emphasis to the wonderful significance of the returned native “equids” who are now reestablishing themselves. Indeed, the museum at the Furnace Creek Death Valley park visitors’ center makes no mention of the horse, burro, or zebra ancestors who lived here for millions of years and up until relatively recent times; and the policy of this and other national parks is to eliminate all wild horses and burros who “stray” into their jurisdictional lands. I expose this gross injustice in my book and go so far as to name the names of individual officials who are responsible. The greater truth concerning these wonderful presences who share planet Earth as home cannot continue to be mocked with impunity!

In December 2013, I visited both the Montgomery Pass wild horse herd and the Marietta wild burro herd and observed many more wild horses (ca. 60) in the Montgomery Pass Inyo USFS Territory than I did just recently. I also observed more wild horses here during my recent visit in mid-November 2014 in route to southern California. On December 28, 2014, I searched all along California Route 120 and all along US Highway 6 north of Benton, CA, and then again on the 29th of December I searched into Nevada clear to Montgomery Pass along Nevada State Highway 360. During both days, I encountered only one band of 8 wild horses just to the southwest of Montgomery Pass. They were above the valley floor and at the foot of the Pinyon-Juniper forest that lies below Boundary Peak, huddled together taking shelter from the cold, biting wind from the north. I was able to get a telescopic photo of them from across the valley (see photo). The only other wild horse I saw in this my most recent trip was a muscular, bright chestnut stallion with a broad white blaze on his face (see photo). He was alone and though I searched far and wide with my binoculars, I could not see any other horses near him. A year prior, I saw six times this number of wild horses! I hope these mustangs have relocated to another part of their year-round habitat and that they have not been illegally captured or killed.

The Montgomery Pass wild horse herd is documented to be naturally self-stabilizing and has not been “gathered,” or rounded up, by government-sponsored contractors – one of the few that claim this distinction. One contributory factor operating here is the high density of mountain lions, or puma, a predatory species that preys upon the wild horses and burros, particularly the very young, infirm, or the aged ones nearing the end of their individual life cycles. They act according to the age-old laws of natural selection, and, so, help to make these equid populations actually more fit for survival in the natural world when compared with the unnatural “take-all” ages and conditions of horses/burros that helicopter or water/bait trapping removals by both BLM and USFS perpetrate against these wonderful animals — all the while wasting many millions of dollars of tax-payer money each year. It would be better by far to employ the sane and well-founded principles of Reserve Design that I have described in Ch. IV of my book as well as in my scientific article of January 2014 (see www.thewildhorseconspiracy.org under Resources).

I am concerned that illegal takings of the Montgomery Pass wild horses may be occurring and recommend a closer monitoring of this herd. The public lands permitted livestock ranchers here receive the hog’s share of the grazing resources and this does not accord to the pure intent of the Wild Free-Roaming Horses and Burros Act of 1971 where it clearly states that land where the wild horses and burros lived in 1971, meaning year-round occupied habitat, would be “devoted principally” to their welfare and benefit, not that of the ranchers, nor the big game hunters, nor the open-pit miners, energy developers, frackers, Off Road Vehicle racers, nor any other sort of disrupters of ecological harmony! Whether for short- or long-term profits, short- or long-term subsidies, or for maintaining a resource-squandering, consumerist lifestyle that is dis-attuned to the age-old cycles of Nature at any cost, it is simply not right to subvert the unanimously passed Wild Free-Roaming Horses and Burros Act of 1971. This is its 43rd anniversary and it is high time that it be obeyed. To do so is in the wholesome interest of the General Public, and there are intrinsic natural values and ecological services at stake, including the great natural beauty of the wild ones themselves that must not be taken for granted. For what is life worth without such beauty?! These are values, my friend, that do in fact preserve the whole of life as one amazingly inter-communicating and inter-dependent community far into the Future.

As concerns the exquisite desert valley and western bounding, colorful Excelsior Mountains known as the Marietta Wild Burro Range (BLM), my two companions and I were able to observe a fair number of wild burros here and to obtain some fine photos (which see). However, the wild horse band I nearly always saw on the northern boundary north of the main entry road off Nevada Highway 360 was not observed nor were the band’s customary abundance of spoor (tracks and feces). The magnificent paint stallion was a real exemplar of equine aliveness and self-realization, with his handsome mares and offspring and all of their keen alertness, spontaneity, and cohesiveness to meet the challenge to survive, to carry on over the generations in this resource-sparse yet awesome desert environment. It is my New Year’s hope and prayer that these special mustangs, as well as those of the Montgomery Pass territory, are still alive and thriving, keeping out of harm’s way in a world that is being increasingly over-populated and overexploited – but not by them! They are very under-populated in relation to their vacant ecological niche here, yet these wild equids are the true restorers and healers of this life home. Needless to say, the over-population and the over-exploitation is by our own kind: humanity!

During the late afternoon of December 29th, while out by the Teel Marsh in the Marietta burro range, my two companions and I were observing a few of the remaining wild burros, when suddenly we were all – humans and burros alike – jolted by a series of 15 massive explosions. These came from an area just to the west of the Excelsior Mountains and to our west. Each detonation produced a series of deep, rumbling shock waves that penetrated not only our ears but our internal organs as well, causing them to vibrated violently and palpably, even with a little pain. And I seemed to hear the whole Earth groaning here. About every half-minute to minute, another such detonation would occur. As two large passenger jets simultaneously to the blasts passed overhead, we began to wonder whether this was the start of WWIII and the beginning of the end for life as we know it on Earth – the prophesized holocaust of the “latter days”. A large and wind-diffused cloud of dusty and debris rose 1,000’s of feet into the air, but fortunately no mushroom cloud appeared. We thought these violent explosions were caused by open-pit miners. This is an interest to which the BLM and USFS have given pretty much carte-blanche to do what they please on the public lands, except in wilderness areas, where, however, cattle and sheep hordes continue to be “grandfathered in” contrary to the true purpose of The Wilderness Act. And these domestic animals, though no fault of their own, are thus make to damage rare and threatened species and their habitats as well as the vital headwaters for all species concerned, including we people!

PM Photo Criag Downer Burro

I shall never forget the look of shock and worry on the faces of the wise, old burros whom we were observing when the terrible explosions went off; and I thought of all the intricately connected subterranean water flows and sources: seeps, streams, and springs that would be violently disrupted by these explosions, and of all the myriad micro-organisms, fungi, plants, and animals whose lives and interrelations would likewise be dealt a very harmful blow by these shameless violations and trespasses against the living world of Nature. And all in order to maintain an extravagant and wasteful modern life style by people who seem oblivious to all that they are destroying, who seem only bent on materialistic conquering and control of a living world they only superficially appreciate or have any respect for.

So, as the New Year 2015 is about to begin and as the Chinese Year of the Horse is now closing in around a month, my prayer and my resolution is to bring enlightened change to all life on Earth where it is most urgently needed: in the minds and hearts and wills of us people. For, while we are most clearly the cause of most problems in the world today, by the same token we are the solution to these same pressing and life-threatening problems. And we can start by increasing the allowed population of wild burros in the Marietta Range, for the arbitrarily set, so-called Appropriate Management Level of ca. 125 individuals is in no way a genetically viable population level (IUCN SSC Equine Specialist Group recommends 2,500 individuals for an equid population to be viable in nature), nor does such a population level begin to fill the natural niche of the burro in this vast desert area. By the way, the wild burro should be classified as an endangered species restoring itself in the land of its origin (see Ch. I of my book).

And much the same can be said of the Montgomery Pass wild horses on their legal Inyo USFS Territory. The ranchers here have to learn to share more of the resource and to release their stranglehold and monopoly on the public lands! So do the giant open-pit mining corporations. So do the big-game hunters. Both the ranchers and the hunters war against the natural predators and the U.S. as well as state and local governments spend millions of dollars each year, e.g. through U.S. Animal Control Service, to cater to pipe dreams for worldly power, control, and wealth. So many endangered Gray Wolves were killed last year in the U.S. after being delisted from Endangered status due to overweening human arrogance and ignorance, yet these interests will arrogantly proclaim that the wild horses or wild burros have no natural predators. How utterly hypocritical and how utterly false!

But let us not end on this note. To begin the New Year and in fulfillment of the Year of the Horse, let us stress what both can and should happen in the way of change. We humans can – in fact we must – transform our relation to “the Rest of Life”. We can learn to share the land and freedom with such magnificent animals as the horses and burros. They have done so much for us and truly we would not be living so high on the hog today were it not for their cooperation. We have what is called a “mutual symbiosis” (a mutually beneficial living together) with them that dates back thousands – I would daresay even millions – of years; and we owe them an enormous debt of gratitude. So what better way to repay this debit than by simply allowing them to be themselves, to carry on their age-old trajectory, to fill their niche and role in the world of Nature and life community in which they are true restorers and healers.

By the lofty grace of God, may this enlightened and beneficent transformation on the part of Man become a living reality right here and right now, in this life and in this world where the Fates have decreed we all live and unfold together. This is our shared home. This is our challenge … and this is my prayer.

Craig Downer, Wildlife Ecologist, President: Andean Tapir Fund (also dedicated to helping wild horses and burros), P.O. Box 456, Minden, NV 89423. www.andeantapirfund.com, www.thewildhorseconspiracy.org ccdowner@aol.com, Director of Ecology and Conservation at Protect Mustangs.org

 

21 thoughts on “Ecologist sounds alarm–wild horses and burros are disappearing in the West

  1. Thank you Craig Downer for reminding us that once our wild horses and burros have vanished from the landscape they will be gone forever. It is not too late to save them from extinction in the wild but time is running out and the American people must act quickly to save them from the BLM’s “management to extinction” agenda.

  2. I agree with Craig in total, and not much I can add as he covered the entire subject quite well. Although, I as well as many American’s, do not want our Public Lands to turn into nothing more than a corporate wasteland, basically a vast dump-station of environmentally questionable business practices that destroy our Public Lands, and for a small temporary profit at best.

    Not only are Wild Horses a treasure, no doubt American Icons, but also a unique form of wildlife; a beauty in motion. As well, the needs of wild horses are slim to just about nothing at all, so to say they need eliminated to make room for corporate-destruction, as well as more cattle-destruction of our Environment, remains nonsense and lacks any type of common sense decision making, or ethics for that matter. The bogus science must stop!

    Keep in mind, the way things are looking currently, the way the Wild Horse Go down in defeat, is the same way WE as American’s may go down in defeat! These types o things happen when we become lax and not caring about things that do not effect us directly — ten when when we allow government agencies to manage our Public Lands as they are doing today — without answering to any one but themselves!

  3. This is a wonderful article and I think everyone of us who fight for the horses and burros can relate to what is happening. These majestic animals carried us into the modern world on their backs. They deserve so much more respect than this modern society is capable of giving them. I have to think there are millions of people out there who don’t know what is happening because I refuse to believe that given the facts they wouldn’t join us in saving their freedom , their legacy and their lives. I’m afraid its getting closer every day. Every wild horse who is taken off their land, put in sanctuaries, put in holding pens and sent to slaughter has lost the freedom they stand for and that’s forever folks. This isn’t a feel good story where someone rides in and sets them free again. There will be no more Wild horses or Burros. Please think about that and get involved. They need to be free on the land that was allotted them many many years ago. THEY NEED TO BE RUNNING FREE!!

  4. Thank you, Craig, for writing this. Thank you for doing what you do and sharing your knowledge and vast experience with the world.

  5. Yes, indeed, Shane, you’ve got this right about the need for change. Thought, Word, Deed, this is the logical progression, and it all begins with Enlightenment for a better way of life. Enlightened Change is possible, but it is our challenge to effect this. Happy and Progressive New Year. Together we can make the big positive difference that is now so urgently needed.

  6. Changes are needed now to save our diminishing herds of wild horses and burros who are truly, nearly gone. There has been a great passing of wild ones and many have gone the route that Craig mentions here; stolen away. This is a reality to horses I know in Colorado and New Mexico, but I was first made aware of these illicit activities from old headlines on wild horses in Nevada. BLM is their predator now and as ever the ranchers and miners. They need our loyalty and respect to survive now. They need our participation in their restoration and recovery.

  7. What a travesty this is. Not only are they rendering our wild ones extinct in the wild, the fossils of their ancestors are not even mentioned at the museum. The BLM and the rest of the usual suspects want to keep the horses native status a secret. Lies and secrets, back room deals, and devastating destruction of our American Wild Mustang is what we the people are paying for.

  8. I agree with the following comment Via Jeanne Brummet “Our challenge is very great and very important. In order to save the
    horses, it seems we must also fight for the public land to remain PUBLIC
    LAND to be enjoyed by all Americans, not just big oil and cattle
    ranchers. It’s going to be tough…!”
    There is some heavy lifting, ahead of us including implementing Reserve Design with well aspects of Holistic Ranching. Certainly rushing into a PZP short cut does not solve the horses dilemma. It is only a dead end.

  9. At some point in the not too distant future we will run out of oil. 50,75, 100 years for sure. Our grandchildren may see the day. I believe that to survive in the future we must consider the past back to a time before oil. Horses may even play a role in that survival as they did in the past. EXCEPT this time there will be no horses we may revert back to the native American culture before the Europeans came. People did virtually all the work and had no or little time for anything but gathering food. I for one would rather have a horse then not. In fact I believe as the people of this land we have a right to survival and with that right horses. The DNA of the American Mustangs must be viable for the sake of future generations. It’s a legal right.

  10. Sadly Craig Downer’s fresh observervations reinforce the contention of many wild horse & burro advocates, i.e. that BLM’s contention that wild horses are overpopulating their herd areas is a fabrication to justify the next phase of their Management Plan for Extinction of wild horses and burros in the West. The PZP Program is that phase, the purpose of which appears to be to prevent the replenishment of herds which have been decimated by persistent, overzealoous BLM roundups over the past decade or so. It is hard to see any rationale for preventing the recovery of herds recently decimated to far below genetically viable, by preventing reproduction by most mares for 2-4 years at best, and permanently at worst, except the slow withering away of these herds.

    In this post and in his book, Craig refers to evidence that further confirms that not only did horses evolve in North America, but very likely, if not certainly, they have resided in North America for eons, including beyond the Ice Age to the present day. This makes them as native a species as the bald eagle or the grey wolf and just as deserving of protection under the Endangered Species Act.

    BLM should have nothing to do with managing wild horses & burros as this conflicts with their original and ongoing mission: to manage public lands for economic return and for recreation. From BLM’s perspective, that recreation doesn’t include wildliffe watching and photography, and to whatever extent those activities are indulged, from BLM’s perspective they don’t apply to wild mustangs, and burros which they regard as unwelcome competition for their beloved cows and sheep. That is why it is becoming increasingly difficult, even for lifelong wild equine authorities like Craig Downer, to find all but a few straggling wild horses & burros on their designated herd areas and even on wild horse and burro ranges, where even BLM maintains that they should predominate. This bodes ill for the future of wild horses & burros in AMERICA as we prepare to exit the Year-of-the-Horse and to enter the ‘Year of the Sheep’.

  11. If only more people cared as you do, Craig. We need to pray for a miracle to save our wild horses and burros and all of Nature before it’s too late.

  12. Thanks for all your great comments, fellow wild equid defenders! It should also be mentioned — and this is a major point in my book — that “In the Wild, the True Vigor of the Race is Preserved!” This is as true of the horse as it is of the human, of the redwood tree as it is of the tiny algae. If people can learn to share the land with the horses and burros and to allow them to be themselves thereon, to live as they have evolved to live for millions of years, and to fill their benign role in relation to the rest of life, they this will be a first step toward restoring sanity to our way of life and to saving the life of this precious planet. It is not all about us humans, you know!

  13. When people make fundamental changes in their lives, I think it comes from inspiration, not motivation, and Craig inspires the best in us. He shows commercial and bureaucratic interests for what they are — woolly and poorly presented, and reminds us that what’s happening now to a shattered number of wild horses is the bane of humanity’s existence. Wild horses are under-populated, mistreated and headed for extinction unless our government is reformed. The compelling vision that Craig provides is reflected in the work of Friends of Animals, and Protect Mustangs. Working together with other thoughtful horse advocates is the answer. Restraining the BLM’s worse intentions is a moral obligation.

  14. Frank Mancuso; I too have always felt this need to keep the horses ‘just in case’ as they have been our source of power longer than anything but fire. And I cannot see a beholden world let the wild horse go so easily.

  15. Thank you Anne Novak and Craig Downer for your diligent efforts to educate and inspire action in those who have true concern for the wild. Not only do you shed light Craig, on the issue of global warming and the climatic changes that are impacting the survival of all species, moreover, you call attention to the deepening crises of ethics and values in human beings who have not risen to the challenge of our times – the moral imperative to evolve and recognise and include all of life in decision making. Using PZP as a stop gap measure for historical and continued mismanagement of public lands and yet another means to circumvent the laws enacted to protect and preserve the horses only illuminates just how off the mark we are. We have done the same to ourselves in thinking prescribing drugs will take care of the ills of society- only to find ourselves sedated to the point of complicity in our own demise. If the intent of the BLM and so called mustang advocates is to ‘preserve’ the wild horse, they must awaken to the facts and soul search what exactly it is that they are wanting to preserve in the wild horse to begin with. It would be more honest if they said they wanted to domesticate the wild horse or manage the wild horse to extinction rather than pretend it is because they respect and champion the vitality of the wild that is lived through the horse being free on land – which this direction confirms it is not.

  16. Any body following the horses tragedy unfolding for the last uh 3 to 5 years could have told you that….. like DUH Wake the fuck up!!!!!

  17. I just don’t see how continuing the claim of “indigenousness” for the feral donkey herds in the Western USA is helping. It’s demonstrably false, and irrelevant to actual herd management issues. It’s just a Red Flag for me, if you believe in the Yukon Ass, I can’t have a serious discussion about Donkey Rescue with you.

  18. We wild horse advocates must not become too mamby-pamby in our approach to the horses. We must respect their integrity in the wild and work to restore this. Not molly cottle them. This is very important, because “in the wild the true vigor of the race is preserved.”

  19. As long as grown, educated men continue to repeat Buffon’s recanted assertion that horses were introduced by the Spanish (Buffon believed horses originated in Africa and had never existed in the Americas) you will not save them. Objectivity in Science is the only thing that could save them. Interpreting the facts without preconceived notions and Spanish Inquisition scholars’ fairy tales. No one is willing to stick their neck out to just speak the truth.

  20. The truth is out. Come to the Forum at FB and see. Protect Mustangs has initiated the first long discussion of PZP and other threats to our wild ones. Truth is not popular. The agendas of many dislike the truth. We want more truth! join us on FB at the Forum on PZP…

  21. Thank you Craig. I have lived in Walker lake NV and in Bishop Ca. but am now living in Benton. I have traveled the Hwys you mention along with Hwy 95. I have a love and appreciation for these beautiful animals. While living in Nv. Close to the military base in Hawthorne Nv. We had a large herd of Mustangs but they were always getting hit on the road. I spoke with Simone and she was able to get the base to put up a fence on highway side so these beautiful animals would not be killed this way. While traveling back and forth I have had so many opportunities to stop and watch. Thank you for bringing the truth to the forefront. Please keep it there. I pray that God will keep them safe until the people open their eyes.We owe it to them. God bless

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