By Geri Vistein as published on/in The Mother Earth News
“Our landscape is covered with a monoculture of cows, who are displacing our magnificent wildlife…”
There is an old tale that has been passed down about a frog, who was living in the bottom of a dark well. One day, a toad came and peered down at the frog. He asked, “Why do you remain down there in the darkness? If you climb out of the well, there is a whole new world out here for you to see?”
So the frog did so, and discovered what he had been missing in the darkness.*
Plight of Wild Mustangs and Keystone Predators
These icons of our nation’s history endure the ongoing cruel roundups by helicopters, forcing them out of their remote refuges and into holding pens. They are no longer free. At this time there are 45,000 of these wild animals being held by the the Bureau of Land Management. Many die along the way, small foals trampled and adults collapse in exhaustion and terror.
Why? It is the story of the frog in the well. As a society we are acting like that frog — just comfortable remaining in the darkness. Not wanting to find another way to share the land with those who were here before us, and have a right to be here for sure; preferring to grab up all the land for oneself, even the land that belongs to all Americans — public land. Our landscape is covered with a monoculture of cows, who are displacing our magnificent wildlife.
I remember when I was participating in research in the Mission Mountains of Montana, my fellow researcher and I came upon a whole herd of cows high up in these mountains, in a very remote area. There were no people around, only the cows, and it seemed so, so unnatural a situation. Even in this remote wild area of a National Forest — they were there. When one experiences this personally, there is a sense of the “unnaturalness” of this situation. There were no wildlife to be seen anywhere.
So why is this government agency rounding up our wild mustangs and burros? First of all, a trust has been broken with these wild beings. They have been pushed to remote areas far too small for them to graze environmentally. The cows have taken their land.
So does rounding them up and keeping them in pens, costing the taxpayer millions upon millions of dollars a year fix their “overpopulation” in shrunken habitats? No!
Will planning all forms of inhumane birth control efforts fix it? No!
Conservation Biology for an Informed ‘Land Mechanism’
In my work as a biologist, it is my goal that I never focus on the problem, but instead move on to seek viable solutions and keep my eyes on how we want it to be, not how it is.
So now back to our frog’s story. We need to climb out of the darkness into the light. The words of Aldo Leopold are so appropriate here: “The last word in ignorance is the man who says of an animal or plant: What good is it? If the land mechanism as a whole is good, then every part is good, whether we understand it or not.”
And that land mechanism Leopold spoke of is all about the predator-prey relationship. All these places where the wild Mustangs live, wolves are not being allowed to inhabit, and cougars are being aggressively killed. So if you were a wild Mustang, what would you choose — living with your predators, or being violently chased into miserable holding pens, your freedom taken from you, your families destroyed, and an unknown and painful future at the hands of humans?
Let us come out of the well! Let the wolves, cougars and wild Mustangs find that balance together. Let us allow the wisdom of Nature to create the balance, but also let us share the land.
Is it really all that hard to climb out of the well?
*You can see the frog story told in the wonderful film Mao’s Last Dancer.
Geri Vistein is a conservation biologist whose work focuses on carnivores and our human relationships with them. In addition to research and collaboration with fellow biologists in Maine, she educates communities about carnivores and how we can coexist with them. You can find her at Coyote Lives in Maine, and read all of Geri’s MOTHER EARTH NEWS posts here.
Categories: Horse News, Wild Burros, Wild Horses/Mustangs
Thanks RT for sharing this story.
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Sharing.
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Yellowstone: you would think humans would learn,
http://www.thewildlifenews.com/2016/10/06/a-chapter-of-conservation-history-all-americans-should-know-how-and-why-the-greater-yellowstone-matters
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Maybe look to Europe, they are way ahead of us
Making Europe a wilder place
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Amazing, isnt it? And what are we – the US – doing? Slaughtering predators – wolves, mountain lions & bears – putting wild horses & burros in feedlot or sending them to slaughter! Sure does make you proud!
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That’s because the are pigs, stop the slaughter of the wild horse’s
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We need to stop consuming and creating a demand for beef cattle. Its real simple. Only eat locally raised beef from a small herdsman, or raise your own.
The plight of our planet is in the selfishness of humanity and its inability to give up commercial cheap meats and foods.
Look in your own house, then step out and cry for change.
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Although abandoning beef is a very good idea, its important to realize that only 3% of American been was off the range last time that I checked with the GAO. Scientific info about damage to the range by cattle abounds but until the political environement is tackled nothing will get better
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Public lands damaged by grazing aren’t getting the restoration they need, report finds:
http://www.opb.org/news/article/public-lands-arent-being-restored/#.V_vEqz6aTQw.facebook
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Commentary: Resolving America’s wild horse crisis requires land reform
By Michael Ray Harris
Special to the Review-Journal
http://www.reviewjournal.com/opinion/commentary-resolving-america-s-wild-horse-crisis-requires-land-reform
Underlying this crisis are fundamental flaws in the laws guiding federal public land management. For well more than a century, we have managed our public lands using a “multiple use” concept.
If Americans want to save Western wildlife, we have to change this unsustainable method of land use planning. Just as we don’t want our leaders to place parks, schools and housing in the middle of industrial sites, we need to separate commercial activities from wildlife habitats on public lands. Given the vast amount of Western lands, wild horses and other wildlife deserve open, unfragmented land to call home
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