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Archive for April, 2011

A couple of years ago, WHOAS rescued 13 wild horses that had been captured during the capture season. These horses had been destined for slaughter when we stepped in.  As noted in previous blogs all these horses were adopted out to kind and loving homes.

Unfortunately, today, one of the people that had adopted two of these horses is unable to continue to care for them. As a result, WHOAS has agreed to help find both these horses new homes. Both of these beautiful animals have had minimal work done with them although they can be approached and patted. They are not properly halter broke and would need experienced individuals who are knowledgable in quieting an older unbroke horse. One of the horses is three; the other one is four. WHOAS hopes that we can find a caring and loving home for them. They do not have to stay together.

Four-year old

Three-year old

If any of our readers wishes to or knows of  someone who may want to adopt a wild horse of their own, they can contact me through the e-mail address which is bob1603@telusplanet.net  Or you can write to WHOAS at Box 70022, Olds, AB, T4H 0A3.

Bob.

Looking for sunshine

This past weekend brought another blast of winter to Alberta. Rather than stay at home, off we went into the west country to check to see how the wild horses were surviving this “never ending story”. This time of year it is difficult to travel a lot of the roads in the back country because of melting snow and mud. We decided to stick to main roads as we searched out some of the herds of wild horses that we know about. The whole day the skies were cloudy and thick with snowflakes. This caused the finding of the horses to be a bit challenging, as they tended to seek cover from the cold wet wind. Undaunted on we went.

Watchful mares

In the wild horse herds many of the mares are heavy in foal and with this unseasonable weather there is a fear that many of the foals may not survive if they were to be born now. The roan mare in the above picture, as you can see, is close to term. We only hope that Mother Nature warms up soon for the newborns.

As we travelled and came across the different herds, it was nice to see how they all appeared still to be so healthy.  Deciding to check on the Wild Horse Creek herd of Raven’s and the two foals that we named Yepa and Snowstorm, we headed toward where we hoped to find them. Sure enough around the bend, there they were shrouded by a fog and heavy falling snow. Yepa is growing rapidly and is very strong considering she was born in January. It was fun to see her actually lead the herd off at the end of our visit with them.

Yepa and her Mom

We were especially concerned about Snowstorm who is only a month old. But there she was in the middle of the herd, back arched to the cold but looking fine. What a relief and what a beauty!

Snowstorm, her older sister and Mom

The herd seems surprisingly unperturbed by the deepening April snow. The younger horses were galloping and playing about, oblivious to the snowstorm we were in. Even young Snowstorm manages to make her way through the snow which is sometimes up to her belly. These are amazing animals who continually prove that they are adapted to this their natural environment. They do deserve to be here roaming free and wild.

Following the herd

Yepa growing up

Raven, the magnificent black stallion of this herd, is an amazing animal. Undaunted by the challenges, he carefully watches over his herd. It is quite enlightening to watch how gentle he is around the two foals who seem to be drawn to him and follow him about. No wonder I’m in love with these wild horses!

After visiting Raven’s herd, on we went to see the other wonders that this country, even in spring snowstorms, has to offer. We came across other herds of horses and even a large herd of elk on a hillside. Most of the herds we found seemed oblivious to our presence, for as we came across them they were more interested in foraging for feed than us. Covered with ice and snow they continually pawed or pushed their noses through the snow to find the succulent grasses buried beneath.

Encased in ice

As the snow increased, we decided to call it a day and leave the horses in peace. We’ll definitely be out there again next week to visit them and to check on those mares that we know are so close to foaling.

Bob.

Moving out

The following is an e-mail that I received from Dr. Claudia Notzke, a renowned wild horse , enthusiast.  Like myself she was mislead by the 16:9 Wild West episode that aired on Global television two weeks ago.  I too was led to believe that the show would be a half hour program with hard hitting journalism, showing the continuing plight of our wild horses.  I therefore spent three days with their crews, trying to show them the beauty which is our wild horses.  Instead it was only a 10 minute spot glorifying the killings of the wild horses again and those that oppose them.  I definitely concur with all of Dr. Notzke’s points.

Global TV’s 16:9 The Bigger Picture Program on Wild Horses:  The Rest of the Story

I had the dubious distinction (as I see it now) of being interviewed for Global TV’s recent program on Alberta’s wild horses.  For a scientist and researcher involved in controversial issues dealing with the media is always risky but sometimes necessary and occasionally even desirable in the interest of sharing information and avoiding being stuck in the proverbial ivory tower.  I must admit that this time I was left with a feeling of embarrassment of having been coopted for a production of dubious quality.

My experience with interviews for the printed media had never been really negative, and as a result I agreed to an interview with Global TV when approached with what was presented to me as a thirty minute program on Alberta’s wild horses, investigating various perspectives on the issue.  The 16:9 Bigger Picture on its website presents itself as hard-hitting, ground-breaking, in-depth investigative journalism.  I thought such approach could only assist in clearing the muddy waters of the wild horse controversy, but I was wrong.

The program presented wild horses as not much more than beautiful misfits in Alberta’s landscape, and it did so in anything but a “hard-hitting, ground-breaking”or “in-depth” fashion.  As a matter of fact, various acquaintances of mine who do not know much about wild horses and do not feel strongly about this issue one way or another, commented to me that they found the program biased and uninformative.  In my opinion even a 15minute program (with commercial breaks) could have been what it claimed to be.  I was interviewed for two hours, and I am at a loss to understand why they wanted to talk to me about the “science” of the issue and then failed to air even a  few sentences of a very concise scientific argument for wild horses as North American wildlife to counter-balance the (pseudo?-) science presented by the “other” side.  Those readers of this blog interested in “the rest of the story” are referred to my Nature Alberta article below.

And finally, one more thing, and here I am talking not as an academic, but as a human being and proud Canadian.  There is much talk about science and even more talk about economics.  I am going to go out on a limb and talk about ethics.  Even the most jaded individual will have to admit that our great country -Canada- , the United States or any country in the Americas would not be what it is today without horses.  We owe them!  And what better way to repay this debt than recognize that some members of this species successfully regained their wild heritage and thus deserve acknowledgement as biological beings in their own right!  So few of them are left.  During the 20th century their numbers throughout Canada declined from between 10 000 and 20 000 to probably less than 2 000, due to bounty systems, unregulated capture and indiscriminate killing of the animals (a tripling or quadrupling of wild horse numbers in Alberta in a time span of 4 years -as suggested in Global TV’s program-  is biologically impossible).  These animals who coexist with other species, who have been shaped by natural selection for countless horse generations, deserve to be left alone without being harassed, brutalized or captured just to earn somebody a few bucks.   I’d like to think that as a society, we can do better than that, even if our government is trying to convince us otherwise.  It is up to us to prove it wrong.

Claudia Notzke, Ph.D.

Claudia Notzke (2010)

Nature Alberta 40 (1):18-21

Western Canada’s Wild Horses:  The Struggle for Legitimacy

“The Horse War” (Cowley 2010) and “A Herd for the Killing” (Powter 2010) – these were the headings of articles in the recent popular press in Alberta.  Such headlines bear eloquent testimony to the beleaguered state of western Canada’s wild horse populations.  Only numbering in the hundreds (in contrast to their equally threatened cousins in the United States whose numbers amount to approximately 60,000 less than half of whom still roam free) their major population concentrations are found on British Columbia’s Chilcotin Plateau, in Alberta’s Rocky Mountain Foothills and Saskatchewan’s Bronson Forest.  These animals have been subjected to mindless cruelty, with the body count of shot horses in central Alberta alone amounting to more than thirty over the past decade.  In Alberta, it was only in January 2010, that the RCMP laid the first charges in any of the killings, and at this point in time, the outcome of impending court proceedings is entirely open.

Up to the point where these first charges were laid, one was left to wonder about a “conspiracy of silence” and a disconcerting lack of determination and political will on the part of those investigating such incidents.  As far as the government was concerned, there appeared to be overwhelming evidence to the effect that the death of wild horses was totally inconsequential for the authorities. Much of this indifference (and ambiguity) can be associated with the ongoing debate of just what these horses are.

Many government agencies consider wild horses as domesticated escapees and invasive species with no dollar value attached to them as either livestock or huntable wildlife.  As “alien” species they must be doing what all alien species do: compete with “native wildlife” and damage “native ecosystems.”   This is powerful mythology and makes them a challenging cause to champion.  The only scientific work ever conducted on wild horses in Alberta dates back to the 1970s and was carried out by R.E. Salter (Salter 1979; Salter and Hudson 1979&1980); it did not document forage or behavioural competition with either wildlife or domestic cattle.  Independent and peer-reviewed research into the ecology and ethology of these animals is badly needed and provides great opportunities for up and coming biologists.

In contrast to this seemingly entrenched government attitude many scientists (paleoecologists, mammologists, range scientists) view the wild horse in North America as returned wildlife (Martin 2005:194; Flannery 2001:295; Morin 2006:303; see also Burckhardt 1996).   The horse coevolved with American ecosystems over 4 million years before becoming extinct 11,000 years ago, due to a combination of human overhunting and climate change. It was reintroduced by the Spanish ca 500 years ago and spread throughout the Americas, in many cases reoccupying its ancient ecological niche. Despite “domestication” the modern horse Equus caballus is genetically equivalent to Equus lambei, a horse, according to fossil records, that represented the most recent Equus subspecies in North America prior to extinction. To speak with Kirkpatrick & Facio (2010:5f; see also Forsten 1992 and Hofreiter & al. 2001)

The key element in describing an animal as a native species is (1) where it originated; and (2) whether or not it co-evolved with its habitat. Clearly, E.caballus did both, here in North America.  There might be arguments about “breeds,” but there are no scientific grounds for arguments about “species.”

The non-native, feral and exotic designation given by agencies are not merely reflections of their failure to understand modern science but also a reflection of their desire to preserve old ways of thinking to keep alive the conflict between a species (wild horses), with no economic value anymore (by law), and the economic value of commercial livestock.

Native status for wild horses would place these animals, under law, within a new category for management considerations.  As a form of wildlife, embedded with wildness, ancient behaviour patterns, and the morphology and biology of a sensitive prey species, they may finally be released from the “livestock-gone-loose” appellation.

Using the 16th century as a baseline of what “natural” North American ecosystems should look like is totally arbitrary. Paleoecologist Paul Martin’s term “Columbian curtain” fittingly describes this blind spot.  While there will never be absolute certainty about what led to the extinction of North America’s megafauna, there is overwhelming scientific evidence to the effect that horses did not disappear from this continent where they evolved over millions of years without the “help” of newly immigrated and very efficient stone age hunters. It is difficult if not impossible for most people to think in terms of “geological time”, but this ought to be “nature’s calendar” and the time frame in which to explore the legitimacy of the horse’s ecological status in our environment.  This is not Australia or New Zealand, where the horse is indeed an “alien introduced species”, its well-deserved cultural and historical status notwithstanding, nor is it a “goats on the Galapagos” scenario!

Government managers’ preoccupation with wild horses’ anticipated ecological damage tends to ignore ecological opportunities presented by horses.

  • Where there is a greater number of species in a given ecosystem, having evolved and evolving a complementarity and a diversification of niches, there is also a healthier and more stable ecosystem, whose checks and balances are well established.  The African savannah is the best example.
  • From fossils we know that the grasses, forbs, shrubs, and trees of the Americas coevolved with a much greater variety of large herbivores than exist today.
  • New World vegetation has evolved in the presence of herbivory by horses.
  • Of all herbivores, horses tend to be the most effective “seeders.”  Whereas cud-chewing cattle (and other ruminants such as buffalo, deer, antelope, and sheep) thoroughly masticate and destroy the majority of seeds they may ingest, the horse does not.  Its inefficient post-gastric digestion system passes grass seeds, and by “banking seeds” insures the perpetuation of its own forage.
  • Due to their upper incisors, horses nip off plants above the ground, rather than ripping plants up by their roots, thus frequently killing them (as sheep and cattle do.)
  • Other benefits: horse trails being used by other species;  crusted snow removal by horses to access forage and water, benefitting cattle, elk, deer and antelope; removal of coarse stands of grass, reducing fire hazard and providing spring grazing for other species; providing prey for predators.

(Downer 1977/2007; McCrory 2002; Henderson pers. comm. 2006)

In several European countries semi-wild horses are used as ecosystem engineers, reoccupying their ancient ecological niches and in many cases boosting biodiversity.  There are also potential cultural, genetic and economic (tourism!) opportunities.

These observations should justify revisiting resource managers’ approach to the wild horse question.  Currently no “management” is being implemented in Alberta, but capture (with no limits on numbers) is being facilitated with no concern for the impact on wild herds or the fate of the captured individuals.  In 2004 the Wild Horses of Alberta Society prepared a well thought-out review of the Horse Capture Regulations, which deserves more attention than it has been getting.  It proposes protection as well as management (where and when necessary) of wild horses on all public lands rather than just designated capture areas and placing wild horses under the jurisdiction of the Fish and Wildlife Division rather than the Public Lands and Forest Division of Sustainable Resource Development.  It also puts great emphasis on the enforcement of regulations and stronger measures against individuals who illegally graze and release domestic horses on public lands.  I would advise caution in following the United States 1971 Wild Free-Roaming Horse and Burro Act without a thorough study of its many loopholes, pitfalls and implementation problems.  Furthermore, our management requirements are much less onerous, since wild horse numbers are smaller and more importantly, already subjected to the influence of a full range of large predators.

In November 2009, there was a precedent-setting development in Saskatchewan:  Bill No. 606 (a private member’s bill), An Act to protect the Wild Ponies of the Bronson Forest, was passed in the Saskatchewan Legislature.

What is needed most of all is a change in attitude towards our free-roaming horses.  Resource managers, conservationists and others who oppose the horse’s presence in the wild should try to open their mind to the possibility that the wild horse is not just a foreign domestic interloper or recent barnyard escapee. While herds in Alberta, Saskatchewan and British Columbia differ in their natural and cultural history,  there is every indication that these animals are of varied origin, some in all likelihood descending from Spanish bloodlines, others of more recent domestic origin.  What they share is natural smarts and genetic diversity acquired through generations of natural selection, features no longer present in many of our domestic breeds.  Management decisions for wild horses should be made based on actual observations and research findings and verifiable data, not assumptions and prejudice.  We owe it to the horse’s unique role in our own history and culture to acknowledge it as a biological being in its own right, not just as a servant of Man.

Thank you Claudia.  Bob.

Where's spring?

During that past month WHOAS has received moral and financial support from a couple of younger wild horse enthusiasts. We would like at this time to thank them for their support and the donations that they raised.

The first one is the group of Olds College equine students: Becca Walters, Katelyn Bergeron, Candice Wiebe, Wesley Schild, and Gavin Pearson. As part of their studies they presented a screening of the film “Spirits in the Wind”, a documentary filmed by Michael Neitzel, of the wild horses of Sundre.  In conjunction with the screening, they also had donation boxes throughout Olds and raffled off a picture and the WHOAS Calendar to raise funds in support of WHOAS. This event was a success in helping them with their public presentations and collecting $304.04 for WHOAS.

Wes and Gavin and gals

 

Becca, Katelyn and Candice

We sincerely thank these students for their efforts and continual support for WHOAS and the wild horses. We wish them success in their equine studies.

This week I also received a letter from Connie Brooks of the Wolf Creek Public School Division – from the Alix M.A.C. School. Some of the girls from her Grade 6 class had a bake sale to raise funds for the wild horses. From their sale they donated $116.54. Again WHOAS sincerely thanks these girls and Ms Brooks for their support. I will be sending a copy of the WHOAS photo show to the school to thank them.

WHOAS and myself are always enlightened by the young people who write to us with their stories and love of the wild horses. Their appreciation of our natural treasures is what will help save all the creatures and the environment for future generations of our wonderful province. This really encourages us to carry on with the work of WHOAS.

Fall beauties

Snowstorm and Yepa at Play

Numerous individuals over the years have continued to write to the Sustainable Resource Development (SRD) to express their concerns over the annual capture and treatment of the wild horses. This is an example of a typical and recent response from the SRD regarding this year’s capture permits.

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We would like to outline our responses to the government’s opinions about the wild horses in this letter. Then also give our response to the hunter and the rangeland biologist from the government that were interviewed on Global Television’s 16:9 Wild West program about the horses.

The SRD continues to lead the public to believe that the horses are domestic horses turned loose or that have escaped from adjacent ranches. They have failed to research the history of the wild horses in Alberta from the intrusion of the first white man into the west country. If they would put aside their apparent prejudices and do this research, which WHOAS and many notable scientists have done, they would see that the horses have been running free and wild since the first explorers set foot on this land. According to American research, and the documentation of pioneers,  the only animals more populated than the buffalo in this country were the wild horses. In 1875 when the NW Mounted Police marched into what is now Alberta, they too documented thousands of wild horses roaming free across the prairies. In fact it is documented in their records, that they abandoned their fancy eastern horses in favour of the wild mustangs who were more hardy and sound. Further research also shows that during WWI the military sent wranglers into the Red Deer River country to round up hundreds of wild horses.  These horses were then sent overseas to haul their military equipment and supplies. This is part of the history of what is now our military mounted regiments, for example, Lord Strathcona Horse Regiment. None of these horses ever returned after serving their country. Even native lore shows that these horses have roamed free in this country long before the invasion of the white man.

It is also noted on the 16:9 program that the government spokesman indicated there were 1,000 wild horses and that their numbers were expanding rapidly. In this letter it states that there is 650 and again expanding. Yet 3-4 years ago they stated that there was only 221 by their aerial count. This indicates a tripling or quadrupling of numbers in just 4 years. Our studies and observations do not substantiate this and neither does science. Natural foal mortality alone takes 20-25% annually. In the worst year, 2005, that we observed, the mortality rate was around 70-75% of the foals. Predators take a large number of horses each year then add the numbers that the SRD allows to be trapped, in a season.

The SRD officials further state that the horses cause potential damage to the rangeland competing with native wildlife for habitat. They say that they also take forage away from the approximately 35,000 head of cattle that are allowed onto these grazing leases during their allotted time.  It also states in this letter that there is riparian damage and an impact on forest regeneration. Then they go on to say they pose a safety risk if they go too close to roads and highways. All these points are based on preconceived notions on unscientific facts concerning the effect the wild horses do have in their environment.

There is a principle which is a bar against all information, which is proof against all arguments and which cannot fail to keep a man in everlasting ignorance – that principle is contempt prior to investigation.” – Herbert Spencer

  1. According to government spokespersons in the past, they state that a study was done in 1972 that showed the horses competed against all other ungulates for the same grasses. This study was done by U of Alberta undergraduate Mr. Salter. This is the only study that has ever been conducted and was not done by government, on the effect that the horses may have on the grasses in their natural environment. It never stated that wild horses take away forage from other wildlife. In fact it indicated more that each species, including the horses utilize different species of grasses to sustain themselves. Further extensive research in the United States, show that the horses through their ability to pass grass seeds through their system without damage, actually helps to rejuvenate the natural landscape of their rangeland. On the 16:9 program the government forage employee stated that the horses nip off the grasses to the ground with their teeth. This is partially true. The horses nip off the grass but since they are constantly on the move, they nip at the grass as they go and very seldom stay in an area and take it down to the ground as he stated. Their action allows the grasses to become a healthier plant. Scientific research has proven over and over again this point. Cattle on the other hand, because they can’t do this, will sometimes uproot plants and grasses in order to feed. One only has to travel in wild horse country to see that any damage being done by wild horses is miniscule compared to that being done by logging and oil interests and some outdoor recreation users (ATVs).
  2. As far as the point that horses do damage to the banks and creeks is truly false. Those experienced in this country know that cattle with their two toes and with their numbers do far more damage than any other species except for humans. The alleged point that horses impact forest regeneration is again an unscientific biased statement. Studies show that in fact that horses when grazing in areas with new seedlings are actually a benefit.  They do this by decreasing the competition by other plant life that are growing along side the seedlings.  They also add nutrients through their droppings. In a meeting WHOAS attended, a logging company representative indicated that in their opinion the horses were eating the tops off the pine tree seedlings. When questioned by our vice president as to how he knew this, he stated that there was horse droppings in these areas. Our vice president then asked him whether there were any moose or deer droppings also. And at this point the logging representative did not respond. Studies in eastern Canada by logging companies, indicate that moose do substantial damage to new seedlings. Should the moose be eradicated?
  3. The government speculates that the horses may pose public safety risk to vehicles on roadways. In argument, our observations of the wild horses show that they move quickly off roadways when they hear vehicles approaching. Drive down any rural or even the QE II highway and see the number of deer and other animals that are involved in vehicle collisions. The number is astronomical. In the forestry in the summer, while driving at night or during the day, you will always find cattle bedding down or standing on the roadways. Which is more dangerous?
  4. Another point we would like to make:  There was a hunter interviewed on the 16:9 program who was surrounded by dead animals that he had hunted and killed who stated that all the wild horses should be eliminated. This was due to the fact that in his opinion, the horses were the reason there was no wildlife left to hunt. However, the video clip showed the hunting of deer out in the middle of the Alberta prairies. Our studies show that the wild horses play an integral part in the ecosystems as they exist at the present in what is their natural home range. Even wildlife game species rely on the the horses at certain points of the year for survival. If the horses weren’t a source of prey for larger predators, you can rest assured they would have a bigger impact on the wildlife and maybe even the cattle. If you can’t find horses, you will likely not find other wildlife either. The biggest point in the reduction of the game animals is the extensive logging and destruction of their habitat. These operations do massive damage to native plant species and the environment. Both grizzly bears and elk need vast expanses of undisturbed range in order to survive. Thusly they have left the forestry areas and moved into the private land that borders the forestry areas and parks. In some places this has become a major problem and safety issue for ranchers and other residents in these areas. As far as mule deer go, the intrusion of white tail deer far into the range that used to be exclusively mule deer, has displaced them, due to the fact that the whiletail is the more aggressive in establishing its territory.
  5. One other final point relates to the SRD stating that no one was hired to trap the wild horses in Cutoff Creek this winter. However, we have had several individuals tell us otherwise. It is noted that the SRD can suspend the license fee, that is supposed to be collected, as they see fit. We have also found out that unbeknowst to the general public and WHOAS, the Horse Capture Regulations have been changed in several points to allow a more unrestricted capture of the wild horses.

WHOAS is definitely not opposed to the necessity of the logging and oil/gas exploration nor to the right of the grazing lease holders to graze their cattle. They have done this for generations and the horses have always been able to coexist in this landscape. We do not believe though that the wild horses be blamed for the same thing that their industries do to the natural environment, even more so than the horses have ever done. WHOAS believes that we should be able to coexist with all the wild animals, including the wild horses.  Further that no one has the right to insist that one species should be eliminated or has more right to live than another. As one of our readers stated in her submission on the blog, “The fact that people say these horses don’t belong here because they aren’t native to North America should really think long and hard about this, caucasians are not native to North America.  Having said that, should we be hunted and forced out the way our ancestors hunted and forced out the native indians!!!”

We strongly believe that we had to do this response in order to answer all the biased and unscientific arguments used against the wild horses and their ability to roam free in Alberta. We will continue to work toward having your wild horses protected properly with adequate legislation designed specifically for our wild horses. We continue to thank you for your efforts to support the wild horses.

Bob