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News News and Information
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August 2000 By Margaret Litvin ABCNews.com
As wildfires
char more than a million acres of the West, conservation officials are
trying to save a much-loved part of its heritage: the wild horses and
burros. The Bureau of Land Management is trying to help, speeding up a program that rounds up some of the animals and finds ranchers to adopt them. Ive been in this program now for 17 years, and this is unusual, says Tom Pogacnik, a senior specialist in the BLMs national wild horse and burro program. Springs that have never dried up before are drying up.
Some who have adopted BLM animals say gentling them (the term now used instead of breaking,) is well worth the effort.
While
the herds are unlikely to actually get burned alive, he said, they are
having to travel long distances out of fire areas to find food and water.
Some, especially mares with foals, are suffering.
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