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Page 13 - அமெரிக்கன் காட்டு குதிரை பிரச்சாரம் News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

Stalemate on Managing Wild Horses Ensues

by Traci Eatherton for Tri-State Livestock News While Biden has overturned a number of previous administrations’ policies, his plans for managing the 1971 Free-Roaming Wild Horse and Burro Act (The Act) are still up in the air. But environmentalist groups are leading the charge, hoping the new administration will boot the grazing competition on any public lands. More than 70 groups have sent a letter to the Biden Administration’s new Interior Secretary, asking that all livestock grazing allotments that overlap designated herd management areas (HMAs) be canceled. The letter, dated April 9, claims that the removal of the cattle will “promote rapid progress toward” establishing a “Thriving Natural Ecological Balance” for all species occupying federal rangelands.

North Dakota: Badlands park to remove 10 horses

by Kaycee Monnens for Tri-State Livestock News As a routine management matter, the Teddy Roosevelt National Park plans to remove a few horses from its herd. The American Wild Horse Campaign, whose aim is to “keep wild horses and burros wild,” recently released a statement which claimed that the Teddy Roosevelt National Park has begun a removal of the herd. To be clear: “There are no plans to remove the herd from the park. Currently, the park manages to prevent growth of the herd, with annual removal objectives matching reproductive input. This remains the park’s goal.” Yearly management of the herd has been in place since its institution. “Horse capture and removal has been standard practice since the herd was fenced into the park with the first roundup of 200 animals in 1954. Herd reduction is conducted to maintain healthy animal numbers considering available forage and competition with native wildlife. This remains the park’s goal. Management of the horse herd is

Animal activists, ranchers and the war on beef in the West

Deseret News Public lands grazing for livestock is under growing pressure Share this story Jeffrey D. Allred, Deseret News When Colorado Gov. Jared Polis declared March 20 as “Meatout Day,” urging residents to consume an alternative protein to meat, he provoked a bull market on the consumption of hamburgers, steaks, lamb chops and other meat products as consumers rushed to fill their plates. The agriculture industry, which is the second largest in Colorado producing a value of $47 billion, reacted angrily as well and governors from at least two other states Wyoming and Nebraska cheerfully declared March 20 as a day that stands in support of meat.

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INTERIOR: Nada Culver draws attention as Biden s possible BLM director

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