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Stop Forest Service’s Plan to Eradicate Oregon’s Wild Horses

Stop Forest Service’s Plan to Eradicate Oregon’s Wild Horses

This alert is no longer active, but here for reference. Animals still need your help.

We have just days to save the Big Summit wild horse herd from the U.S. Forest Service in Oregon. The Service wants to drastically reduce herd size and could even brutally rip the ovaries out of the female horses. We must take urgent action now to prevent this diabolical plan from moving forward!

The U.S. Forest Service has been blatantly distorting the truth regarding wild horse reproduction rates of Oregon’s Big Summit wild horse herd in its attempts to reduce the number of wild horses to extinction levels. However, this herd’s population has been relatively static at 130 horses for many years, exposing the Service’s blatant lies! 

The Forest Service’s proposed plan contains three options with its preferred being “Alternative 2,” which would reduce the herd to between 12-57 horses! A herd of just twelve horses would likely sentence the herd to immediate extinction, and any number below the current 130 would render the herd’s genetic viability futile. This option also suggests a particularly brutal form of surgical sterilization, which involves the barbaric and painful removal of mares’ reproductive organs.

 

The Forest Service based its plans on flawed data that only considers 4,900 acres, which constitutes the horses’ winter range, instead of the 25,434 total acres of their territory. The Service also utilized a ridiculous 30% riparian zone calculation to account for transitional areas between dry land and bodies of water, despite only 4% of the winter range actually designated as “riparian.” 

In classic anti-horse double-speak, the plan states that “none of the alternatives will substantially impact resource,” meaning that “resources” such as streams, vegetation, and other wild animals are virtually unaffected by the presence of wild horses. This is inconsistent with other sections of the document that incorrectly blame resource damage on the wild horses. The document also conveniently omits mention of severe damage from 100 years of logging interests and ranchers grazing exploited animals on our public land, as well as more recent human ATV usage. 

What YOU Can Do: 

This alert is no longer active, but here for reference. Animals still need your help.

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