Current:Home > reviewsPublic to weigh in on whether wild horses that roam Theodore Roosevelt National Park should stay -AssetBase
Public to weigh in on whether wild horses that roam Theodore Roosevelt National Park should stay
View
Date:2025-04-18 18:25:28
BISMARCK, N.D. (AP) — The National Park Service has turned to the public to help decide whether the famous wild horses in North Dakota’s Theodore Roosevelt National Park should stay or go.
The federal agency launched a 30-day public comment period on Monday. It also released a draft environmental assessment of the wild horse herd that said removal of the horses would benefit native wildlife and vegetation, but may lessen the experience of visitors who come to the park to see the horses or cattle, the Bismarck Tribune reported.
North Dakota Republican Gov. Doug Burgum said in a statement Tuesday that he will continue urging NPS to keep the wild horses in the park.
“These horses are a hugely popular tourist attraction, embodying the untamed spirit of the Badlands while also reminding us of the deep ties to Roosevelt’s ranching and conservation legacy,” Burgum said.
He added that “wild horses roamed those lands during Roosevelt’s transformative years in the Badlands, when President Truman signed the bill creating the park in 1947 and when it received official national park status in 1978.”
The federal agency’s proposal has worried advocates who say the horses are a cultural link to the past and disagree with park officials who have branded the horses as “livestock.”
Visitors who drive the scenic park road can often see bands of horses, a symbol of the West and sight that delights tourists.
Removal would entail capturing horses and giving some of them first to tribes, and later auctioning the animals or giving them to other entities. Another approach would include techniques to prevent future reproduction and would allow those horses to live out the rest of their lives in the park.
A couple bands of wild horses were accidentally fenced into the park after it was established in 1947, Castle McLaughlin has said. In the 1980s, McLaughlin researched the history and origins of the horses while working as a graduate student for the Park Service in North Dakota.
Park officials in the early years sought to eradicate the horses, shooting them on sight and hiring local cowboys to round them up and remove them, she said. The park even sold horses to a local zoo at one point to be food for large cats.
Around 1970, a park superintendent discovered Roosevelt had written about the presence of wild horses in the Badlands during his time there. Park officials decided to retain the horses as a historic demonstration herd to interpret the open-range ranching era.
veryGood! (5)
Related
- California DMV apologizes for license plate that some say mocks Oct. 7 attack on Israel
- Hamas' tunnels: Piercing a battleground beneath Gaza
- Parents in a Connecticut town worry as After School Satan Club plans meeting
- Inflation eased in October as cheaper gas offset overall price increases
- Buckingham Palace staff under investigation for 'bar brawl'
- Russian UN envoys shoot back at Western criticism of its Ukraine war and crackdown on dissidents
- Life-saving emergency alerts often come too late or not at all
- Head of China’s state-backed Catholic church begins historic trip to Hong Kong
- Spooky or not? Some Choa Chu Kang residents say community garden resembles cemetery
- The legendary designer of the DeLorean has something to say about Tesla's Cybertruck
Ranking
- Intellectuals vs. The Internet
- Jill Biden tells National Student Poets that poetry feeds a hungry human spirit
- Titanic first-class menu and victim's pocket watch each sell at auction for over $100,000
- Congressional delegations back bill that would return land to Winnebago Tribe of Nebraska
- Could Bill Belichick, Robert Kraft reunite? Maybe in Pro Football Hall of Fame's 2026 class
- South Carolina jumps to No. 1 in the USA TODAY Sports women's basketball poll ahead of Iowa
- Chicago firefighter dies after falling through light shaft while battling blaze
- Video purports to show Israeli-Russian researcher kidnapped in Iraq
Recommendation
Residents worried after ceiling cracks appear following reroofing works at Jalan Tenaga HDB blocks
1 in 3 US Asians and Pacific Islanders faced racial abuse this year, AP-NORC/AAPI Data poll shows
Police and protesters clash at Atlanta training center site derided by opponents as ‘Cop City’
Horoscopes Today, November 14, 2023
Federal hiring is about to get the Trump treatment
'We need to record everything': This team stayed behind in a Ukrainian war zone
Exxon Mobil is drilling for lithium in Arkansas and expects to begin production by 2027
Teens wrote plays about gun violence — now they are being staged around the U.S.