Current:Home > StocksWild horses to remain in North Dakota’s Theodore Roosevelt National Park, lawmaker says -CapitalEdge
Wild horses to remain in North Dakota’s Theodore Roosevelt National Park, lawmaker says
Surpassing View
Date:2025-04-10 12:43:07
BISMARCK, N.D. (AP) — Wild horses will stay in North Dakota’s Theodore Roosevelt National Park amid fears from advocates that park officials would remove the beloved animals from the rugged Badlands landscape, a key lawmaker said Thursday.
Republican U.S. Sen. John Hoeven said he has secured a commitment from the National Park Service to maintain the park’s roughly 200 horses. His office said the Park Service will abandon its proposed removal of the horses under an environmental review process begun in 2022.
“This will allow for a healthy herd of wild horses to be maintained at the park, managed in a way to support genetic diversity among the herd and preserve the park’s natural resources,” Hoeven’s office said in a statement.
Park visitors, much to their delight, often encounter the horses while driving or hiking in the rolling, colorful Badlands where a young, future President Theodore Roosevelt hunted and ranched in the 1880s.
The horses roam the park’s South Unit near the Western tourist town of Medora. In 2022, park officials began the process of crafting a “livestock plan” for the horses as well as about nine longhorn cattle in the park’s North Unit near Watford City. Park officials have said that process aligned with policies to remove non-native species when they pose a potential risk to resources.
“The horse herd in the South Unit, particularly at higher herd sizes, has the potential to damage fences used for wildlife management, trample or overgraze vegetation used by native wildlife species, contribute to erosion and soil-related impacts ... and compete for food and water resources,” according to a Park Service environmental assessment from September 2023.
Proposals included removing the horses quickly or gradually or taking no action. Park Superintendent Angie Richman has said the horses, even if they ultimately stay, would still have to be reduced to 35-60 animals under a 1978 environmental assessment. It wasn’t immediately clear how Hoeven’s announcement affects the future number of horses or the longhorns.
Thousands of people made public comments during the Park Service review, the vast majority of them in support of keeping the horses. North Dakota’s Republican-controlled Legislature made its support official in a resolution last year. Gov. Doug Burgum offered state help to maintain the horses.
Hoeven’s announcement comes after Congress passed and President Joe Biden recently signed an appropriations bill with a provision from Hoeven strongly recommending the Park Service maintain the horses. The legislation signaled that funding to remove the horses might be denied.
The horses descend from those of Native American tribes and area ranches and from domestic stallions introduced to the park in the late 20th century, according to Castle McLaughlin, who researched the horses as a graduate student while working for the Park Service in North Dakota in the 1980s.
veryGood! (4)
Related
- The Best Stocking Stuffers Under $25
- Beyoncé Just Revealed the Official Name of Act II—And We’re Tipping Our Hats to It
- What Nick Saban believed in for 50 years 'no longer exist in college athletics'
- Judge approves Trump’s $92 million bond to cover jury award in E. Jean Carroll defamation case
- Former longtime South Carolina congressman John Spratt dies at 82
- A new generation of readers embraces bell hooks’ ‘All About Love’
- Matthew Koma gets vasectomy while Hilary Duff is pregnant: 'Better than going to the dentist'
- New Heights: Jason and Travis Kelce win iHeartRadio Podcast of the Year award
- California DMV apologizes for license plate that some say mocks Oct. 7 attack on Israel
- Massachusetts governor appeals denial of federal disaster aid for flooding
Ranking
- Nearly 400 USAID contract employees laid off in wake of Trump's 'stop work' order
- Texans are acquiring running back Joe Mixon from the Bengals, AP source says
- Eric Carmen, 'All By Myself' singer and frontman of the Raspberries, dies at 74
- Four astronauts from four countries return to Earth after six months in orbit
- Spooky or not? Some Choa Chu Kang residents say community garden resembles cemetery
- Gender ID, sexual orientation can be talked about in Florida classrooms after lawsuit settlement
- Dolly Parton says one of her all-time classic songs might appear on Beyoncé's new album
- Jury convicts man in fatal stabbings of 2 women whose bodies were found in a Green Bay home
Recommendation
Average rate on 30
Why Jason and Travis Kelce Are Thanking the Swifties for Their Latest Achievement
Caitlin Clark, Iowa set conference tournament viewership record after beating Nebraska
Robert Hur defends special counsel report at tense House hearing on Biden documents probe
Will the 'Yellowstone' finale be the last episode? What we know about Season 6, spinoffs
NASA's Crew-7 returns to Earth in SpaceX Dragon from ISS mission 'benefitting humanity'
Oscars’ strikes tributes highlight solidarity, and the possible labor struggles to come
Matthew Koma gets vasectomy while Hilary Duff is pregnant: 'Better than going to the dentist'