List of Bureau of Land Management Herd Management Areas

Last updated

Mustangs on the Saylor Creek HMA, Idaho Wildhorsesowyhee.jpg
Mustangs on the Saylor Creek HMA, Idaho
Wild horses at the Onaqui Mountains HMA in Utah Onaqui HMA.jpg
Wild horses at the Onaqui Mountains HMA in Utah

Herd Management Areas (HMA) are lands under the supervision of the United States Bureau of Land Management (BLM) that are managed for the primary but not exclusive benefit of free-roaming "wild" horses and burros. [1] While these animals are technically feral equines descended from foundation stock that was originally domesticated, the phrase "wild horse" (and wild burro) has a specific meaning in United States law, giving special legal status to the descendants of equines that were "unmarked and unclaimed" on public lands at the time the Wild and Free-Roaming Horses and Burros Act of 1971 (WFRHBA) was passed. Horses that escaped or strayed from other places onto public lands after December 15, 1971, did not automatically become protected "wild horses". [2] In 1971, free-roaming horses and burros were found on 53,800,000 acres (21,800,000 ha) of federal land. Today there are approximately 270 HMAs across 10 states, comprising 31,600,000 acres (12,800,000 ha). Additional herd areas (HAs) had free-roaming horse or burro populations at the time the Act was passed and some still have horse or burro populations today, but unlike the HMAs, they are not managed for the benefit of equines. In addition, some free-roaming equines protected under the WFRHBA are found on lands managed by the National Park Service (NPS), and United States Forest Service (USFS), where they are called wild horse territories (WHT). The BLM sometimes manages equine populations for other federal agencies, the USFS manages some of its own WHTs, and sometimes the agencies administer these areas jointly.

Contents

Equine population estimates in each HMA can vary significantly from year to year, [3] depending on habitat condition in a given area, [4] fecundity of the animals, [5] or if a gather has occurred. [6] Census-gathering methods also vary, [5] and wild horse advocacy groups frequently question the validity of the population counts. [7] Nonetheless, each HMA is given an Appropriate Management Level (AML), usually given as a range showing upper and lower limits. [8] This is the BLM's assessment of the number of equines the land can sustain. When the population gets too high, some animals are removed and placed for adoption with private owners or sent to long-term holding facilities elsewhere. [1] Since 1971, about 220,000 horses and burros have been adopted through the BLM. [9]

The original feral horse herds in the Americas were of Spanish horse ancestry. Additional stock brought by eastern settlers moving west, ranging from draft horses to Arabians and Thoroughbreds, added a variety of other horse types. Today, a few populations retain relatively pure Spanish type, but most are a mixture of bloodlines. Some herds have had DNA testing to determine their ancestry. [2] [lower-alpha 1]

Description

Horses on the Pryor Mountains Wild Horse Range in Montana Feral horses - Pryor Mountain Wild Horse Range - Montana.jpg
Horses on the Pryor Mountains Wild Horse Range in Montana

The BLM distinguishes between "herd areas" (HA) where feral horse and burro herds existed at the time of the passage of the Wild and Free-Roaming Horses and Burros Act of 1971, and "Herd Management Areas" (HMA) where the land is currently managed for the benefit of horses and burros, though "as a component" of public lands, part of multiple use management, and thus not exclusively as equine habitat. When the 1971 Act was passed, the BLM assessed herd areas to determine which places could become HMAs based on whether they had adequate food, water, cover, and space to "sustain healthy and diverse wild horse and burro populations over the long-term". Some herd areas still contain feral horses or burros but for a number of reasons—including size of herd, habitat, and land ownership—they are not currently managed for equines by the BLM. [10] Additional wild, free-roaming horses and burros are found on Wild Horse and Burro Territories in six states under the auspices of the United States Forest Service (USFS) and are also protected by the Act. Some of the USFS territories are managed in cooperation with the BLM. [11] The USFS has about 50 Wild Horse and Burro Territories. [12] There are also some protected free-roaming equine populations found on lands governed by the National Park Service (NPS). [13]

Today there are approximately 270 separate HMAs across 10 states. [14] In 1971, free-roaming horses were found on 53.8 million acres of federal land, designated as herd areas. From this land base, 31.6 million acres became HMAs, of which 26.9 million acres are managed by the BLM. [15] In addition, some herd areas still are identified as having free-roaming horse populations. [10]

Several laws and specific regulations govern the management of free-roaming horses and burros on federal lands, both those managed by the BLM and those managed by the USFS. These include the Wild Horse Protection Act of 1959, the Wild and Free-Roaming Horses and Burros Act of 1971, as amended by the Federal Land Policy and Management Act of 1976 and the Public Rangelands Improvement Act of 1978. The United States Code of Federal Regulations (CFR) addresses management of wild free-roaming horses and burros at 36 CFR 222 Subpart B. [2]

Though population numbers in individual HMAs vary significantly from year to year, [4] the total population of free-roaming horses overall exceeds the target population that the BLM considers to be the appropriate management level. [16] Horses can eat close to their weight in forage in a month, and in some areas, such as the very arid climate of Nevada, it can take 20 acres (8.1 ha) or more to sustain one horse for one month. [17] 2013 population counts of horse numbers under the management of the BLM estimated there were over 33,000 horses located on Herd Management Areas. There were also approximately 6,800 burros under BLM management. [14] [18] as of March 1,2014 the BLM estimated a total of 49,209 horses and burros were roaming free on BLM-managed lands. [16] Though the 2015 AML maximum was set at 26,715, [8] in 2016, that total was 55,311 horses and 11,716 burros. [19] Over half of all the free-roaming horses and burros under the management of the BLM live in Nevada, where there are 83 separate HMAs. [9] [19]

Excess horses are moved to temporary and long-term holding facilities Wild horses drinking water at temporary holding (8058439189).jpg
Excess horses are moved to temporary and long-term holding facilities

Population of free-ranging horses is a concern because, unlike wildlife or livestock, horses are not hunted, do not face significant natural predators, nor are their numbers human-controlled by means of grazing permits. Without population control, their numbers can double every four years. [1] With current management practices, numbers currently are increasing by about 15% to 18% each year. [19] As of 2014, 48,447 equines that had been captured, removed from the range were kept in holding facilities in various locations throughout the west and midwest. [16] Many of these excess animals are eligible to be placed for "adoption" with private owners. Since 1971, about 220,000 horses and burros have been adopted through the BLM. [9] In the early 2000s, about 8,000 horses a year were adopted, but at present, there are only about 2,500 horses adopted each year. The BLM attributes this to changing economic conditions. Of those remaining in the wild, as of 2016, the estimated 67,027 horses and burros are two and a half times the population in 1971 when the Act was passed and about twice the recommended Appropriate Management Level (AML). Besides removal of about 3,500 animals in 2016 to long-term holding facilities and adoption, the BLM hopes to use fertility control and other tools to reduce numbers of horses on the range. [19]

Summaries of population by state

StateCommentHMAsHMA acresPop.
horses [lower-alpha 2]
Pop.
burros
TotalAMLRef.Image
ArizonaArizona manages the largest free-roaming burro population in the country. Two Arizona HMAs are for horses, the other seven are for burros, though some burro HMAs have been depopulated and contain no burros at present.9 HMAs, 2 USFS territories2,296,269 acres (929,267 ha)3185,3175,6351,676 [11] [18] [19] [20] Arizona 2004 Mustangs.jpg
CaliforniaState HMAs include horses descended from ranch estrays, cavalry remounts, Spanish type, and draft types in a few areas, some HMAs have burro populations22 HMAs, 8 USFS territories2,533,722 acres (1,025,361 ha)4,925; AML 1,756 horses3,3918,3162,200 [11] [18] [19] [21] CALIFORNIA--SIERRA FOOTHILLS - NARA - 542619.jpg
ColoradoColorado adopts about 150 horses and burros a year, runs the Wild Horse Inmate Program (WHIP) to pair prison inmates with Mustangs to train for adoption. Has about 1,000 animals available for adoption at any given time.4 HMAs404,013 acres (163,498 ha)1,53001,530812 [18] [19] [22] Wild Horse in Piceance (9267476937).jpg
Idaho"Idaho's wild horses are descendants of domestic horses that escaped to or were turned out on the public lands prior to passage of the Horse and Burro Act in 1971." Several HMAs contain animals with known descent from Thoroughbred and Quarter Horse stallions turned out in the area.6 HMAS418,268 acres (169,267 ha)4680468617 [18] [19] [23] Day 3 Soda Fire Emergency Wild Horse Gather (20976432632).jpg
MontanaThe Pryor Range was originally set aside as a wild horse refuge in 1968, expanded after 1971. BLM partners with the Pryor Mountain Wild Mustang Center located in Lovell, Wyoming. Range has a 100% adoption rate1 HMA33,187 acres (13,430 ha)1600160120 [18] [19] [24] [25] Pryor Mountains feral horse - 2009.jpg
NevadaNevada holds just under half of the wild horses and burros managed by the BLM and just under half of the total acreage in the United States managed as HMAs. As of 2013, total population is 20,195 with an AML of 12,700, totals are for horses and burros combined)83 HMAs, 24 USFS territories15,718,630 acres (6,361,100 ha)31,9792,55234,35112,811 [11] [18] [19] [26] Cherry Springs on Elko District (7692317350).jpg
New MexicoBLM Region also manages the regional holding facility in Pauls Valley, Oklahoma. New Mexico has additional free-ranging horses on several Forest Service Wild Horse and Burro territories.2 HMAs, 11 USFS territories28,613 acres (11,579 ha)175017583 [8] [11] [19] [27] Wild Horses of Placitas.jpg
OregonThree to five herds are gathered each year, Oregon is home to the Kiger Mustang 17 HMAs, 2 USFS territories2,978,571 acres (1,205,385 ha)3,785563,8412,715 [11] [18] [19] [28] [29] Wild Horses on Steens Mountain (6983016963).jpg
UtahTwo HMAs are also managed for burros. Numbers within each HMA vary from 35 to over 400.20 HMAs, 2 USFS territories2,451,227 acres (991,976 ha)5,4404005,8401,956 [8] [11] [18] [19] [30] Mustang Utah 2005 2.jpg
WyomingHMAs managed by Wyoming BLM exclude the Pryor Range, which is managed by BLM in Montana16 HMAs4,768,682 acres (1,929,817 ha)6,53506,5353,725 [14] [18] [19] Wild Mustangs in Wyoming.jpg
TotalsTotal population does not include horses kept in long-term holding facilities270 HMAs, 49 USFS territories31,631,362 acres (12,800,758 ha)55,31111,71667,02726,715 [18] [19]
  1. Herds which have had DNA testing are generally noted in the herd descriptions for each HMA
  2. Numbers vary from year to year. Not all states separate AML for horses and burros

List of HMAs

Actual population numbers vary widely from year to year, but often the numbers exceed the AML for a given herd management area. [19] The AML for each range usually has an upper and a lower limit. [31] Types of horses range widely in size, coat color, conformation and historic origins, from horses tracing to Colonial Spanish Horse origins to horses descended from locally escaped ranch and farm stock well into the mid-20th century. Many burro herds descend from animals strayed from mining operations. [lower-alpha 1]

HMAs that cross state boundaries are included with the state which administers the HMA. The number of areas listed below does not equal 270 for several reasons: First, some herd areas still contain free-roaming horse and/or burro populations and are included in the BLM lists. [32] Second, some USFS wild horse territories are listed by the BLM because they managed under a cooperative agreement, particularly those where USFS and BLM land are adjacent and the same herd crosses into both areas. Third, some HMAs are contiguous and/or jointly administered as a single unit; some of these also may cross state lines, [lower-alpha 2] and finally, BLM records vary annually; changing conditions or planned management decisions may remove animals altogether, land swaps and management decisions may transfer land between federal agencies or into private ownership, some areas move from HMA to HA status. [lower-alpha 3]

Arizona

List of HMAs in Arizona
NameHerd descriptionStateType(s)Pop./AMLRef.
AlamoDescendants of burros abandoned by early prospectors, miners and local rangers. Origins of North African ancestryAZburroAML 128–160 [8]
[36]
Big Sandy HMABrought by miners in the 1860s, more brought by farmers in the 1870s to breed mules.AZburroAML 111–139 [8]
[37]
Black Mountain HMA (AZ)Descendants of burros brought by miners in the 1860s. Origins of North African ancestry. Population has been as high as 2,000. Currently about 90 animals per year are removedAZburroAML 382–478 [8]
[38]
[39]
Cerbat Spanish type, origins disputed. May descend from Spanish mustangs, introduced as early as the 1500s. May also have origins from estrays from explorers in the 1700s or animals abandoned by livestock ranchers in the early 1800s.AZhorseAML 72–90 [8]
[40]
Cibola-TrigoHorses of mixed type, probably descended from estray ranch horses circa 1940, includes individuals of Appaloosa type, possibly descended from a known Appaloosa stallion. Burros probably arrived with miners in the mid-1800s.AZ/
CA [lower-alpha 4]
horse
burro
AML 120 horses, 285 burros [41]
Harquahala HAHerd area not managed for wild equines. Burros descended from pack animals brought to the area in the late 1800s. Originally were to be removed after the 1971 Act was passed, but no funding was provided and today the land is managed to incorporate burros on the land, which is designated as a Special Botanical Area owing to diverse vegetation.AZburro153 [8]
[42]
Havasu HMAArrived with miners about 1858, abandoned as railroads came into the area. Nubian wild ass and Somali wild ass characteristics. Adjacent to Chemehuevi HMA in California and close to Lake Havasu HMA in NevadaAZ/
CA [lower-alpha 5]
burroAML 133–166 [8]
[33]
Lake Pleasant Descended from small pack burros escaped or released in the 1880s and 1890s.AZburro476/AML 166–208 [8]
[43]
Little Harquahala HAHerd area not managed for wild equines. Abandoned burros in late 1800s formed a free-roaming population but due to assorted issue regarding habitat and conflicts with private landowners, land use plans in the early 1980s prescribed a "zero population" area and all burros have been removed.AZburro0 [8]
[44]
Painted Rock HAHerd area not managed for wild equines. Burros descended from pack and work animals brought into the desert in the late 1800s. Tend to be gray, refined structure. Probable North African ancestryAZburro6 [8]
[45]
Tassi-Gold Butte HABurros arrived with miners, sheepherders and cattlemen in the late 1800s. Land use planning prescribed the Tassi section as a "zero population" area and all burros were removed, though a 2005 census noted 10 animals.AZ/
CA
burro58 [8]
[46]

California

List of HMAs in California
NameHerd descriptionStateType(s)Pop./AMLRef.
BitnerHorses believed to have originated from area ranches, colors mostly blacks and bays, some piebald CAhorseAML 15–25 [31]
[47]
BuckhornSpanish origins originally with additions of ranch stock and strong influence of U.S. Cavalry horses from World War I era.CA/
NV
horse59–85 [48]
Carter ReservoirSpanish phenotype, including many dun horses with primitive markings.CA/
NV [lower-alpha 6]
horse25–35 [49]
CentennialHorses are believed to descend from abandoned or escaped ranch stock. Most are bay or gray, ranging from 14 to 16  hands (56 to 64 inches, 142 to 163 cm) and weighing 900–1,100 pounds (410–500 kg). The herd management area also had a 2015 population of 426 burros, even though the AML is zero. Some animals stray onto the China Lake Naval Air Weapons Station.CAhorse
burro
AML 134–168 horses, 0 burros [8]
[50]
ChemehueviBurros descended from those brought by miners during the 1800s then later abandoned. Adjacent to Havasu HMA in Arizona and Lake Havasu HMA in Nevada, and animals migrate between these areas.CAburroAML 97–108 [8]
[51]
[52]
Chicago ValleyLight saddle horse type, believed to have originated from area ranchesCAhorseAML 10–12 [8]
[53]
Chocolate–Mule Mountains HMABurros descended from those brought by miners during the 1800s then later abandoned.AZ/
CA [lower-alpha 7]
burroAML 109–133 [8]
[54]
Clark Mountain HAHerd area not managed for a wild equine populationCAburro150 [31]
CoppersmithHorses originally of Spanish heritage diluted with ranch stock and US Cavalry remounts. Many have phenotypes that resemble Morgans and Quarter Horses.CAhorse50–75 horses [8]
[55]
Dead Mountain HABurros live in this herd area, but it is not managed for a wild equine population.CAburro85/AML 0 [8]
Devils Garden Wild Horse Territory/Round Mountain HMAMixed draft horse and light breed types in a wide variety of colors. Area managed by the United States Forest Service, BLM manages gathers and adoption. Horses with draft horse characteristics may be up to 1,300 pounds (590 kg), others areas are dominated by animals with light horse breed characteristics averaging 1516  hands (6064 inches, 152163 cm) and 900–1,200 pounds (410–540 kg) pounds, thought to have descended from horses used on area farms and ranches. The acreage managed by the BLM is called Round Mountain.CAhorse206–402 USFS, 8–10 BLM [8]
[56]
[57]
[58]
[59]
Fort SageEstray farm and ranch horse ancestry, HMA is in both Nevada and California but is managed by California BLMCA/
NV [lower-alpha 8]
horseAML max 29 CA, 36 NV [8]
[60]
Fox HogMixed light and draft types, some with draft horse characteristics. HMA is in both Nevada and California but is managed by California BLMCA/
NV
horse120–220 [61]
[62]
High RockSpanish type. Two ranges, East Canyon Home Range and Little High Rock Home Range, managed as one unit but with separate AMLs. Some of the horses in this herd exhibit Spanish Mustang characteristics.NV [lower-alpha 9] horse30 to 40; East Canyon
48 to 80; Little High Rock
[63]
Lee FlatSmall, gray burros descended from those left behind by minersCAburro15 [64]
Massacre LakesHorses believed to descend from estray ranch stockCAhorse25–45 [8]
[65]
New RavendaleEstray horses of both light ranch stock and draft typeCAhorse25 [66]
Nut MountainAlso called Pine Nut Mountain, horses are 13 to 14  hands (52 to 56 inches, 132 to 142 cm) high and nearly all coat colors have been observed, including black, bay and pinto. Horses are descended from estrayed ranch stock, some pintos as well as black and bay colors.NV [lower-alpha 10] horseAML 30–55 [8]
[68]
[67]
Palm CanyonEstray ranch stock. This area is described as a HMA in some BLM documents but as a HA in others.CAhorse
burro
6 horses
14 burros
[8]
[69]
Panamint HABurros live in this herd area, which is not managed for a wild equine populationCAburro69 [8]
Piper MountainEstrays from ranch horse stock and abandoned miners' burrosCAhorse
burro
17 horses, 82 burros [70]
Piute Mountain HAHerd area not managed for a wild equine populationCAburro22 [8]
Red Rock Lakes HMASpanish mustang ancestry diluted by other horse types brought in by ranchersCAhorse25 [71]
Slate Range HAHerd area not managed for a wild equine population. Population grew from 66 to 277 burros from 2005 to 2015CAburro277 [8]
[31]
Twin PeaksHorses originally of Spanish heritage diluted with ranch stock and US Cavalry remounts. Burros from sheepherding operations. Occasionally a few mules are produced due to intermingling of horse and burro herds.CAhorse
burro
448–758 horses
72–116 burros
[72]
Wall CanyonHorses are believed to descend from ranch stock. Most are dark, solid-colored horses, but there are a few that are piebald. Height ranges from 14 to 16  hands (56 to 64 inches, 142 to 163 cm) and weight from 900 to 1,100 pounds (410 to 500 kg). Most land is in Nevada but the HMA is managed by CaliforniaCA/
NV
horse15–25 [73]
[74]
Waucoba-Hunter MountainSmall burros thought to have descended from abandoned miners' animals, possibly supplemented by estrays from sheepherding operationsCAburro11 [75]

Colorado

List of HMAs in Colorado
NameHerd descriptionStateType(s)Pop./AMLRef.
Little Book Cliffs Wild Horse RangeOne of only three areas in the United States specifically designated as a wild horse range. At 3- to 4-year intervals, between 20 and 60 horses are rounded up and removed from the range to be adoptedCOhorse90–150 [8]
[76]
Piceance/East Douglas Creek HMAConsists of Douglas Creek and Piceance Basin, administratively linked with the West Douglas Herd Area, all adjacent to one another. Genetic analysis showed ancestry most similar to gaited, racing and light riding breeds of domestic horse, a bit of genetic similarity to some old world pony and draft breeds. North Piceance HA contains a small number of horses [lower-alpha 11] COhorseAML 135–235 [31]
[34]
[77]
[78]
[79]
Sandwash BasinWide variety of coat colors, DNA studies show greatest genetic similarity to Spanish/Iberian horse breeds, some gaited horse genes and other ancestry similar to domestic, North American breeds, plus some Arabian blood.COhorseAML 163–363 [80]
Spring Creek BasinSmall, about 14  hands (56 inches, 142 cm), originated from ranch stock that arrived In the late 1800s, later used for cavalry mounts until about 1940 when almost all horses were removed from the range, the remnants becoming the ancestors of the present day herd.COhorseAML 35–65 [81]
West Douglas Creek HAHerd area not managed for equines, had a horse population of 97 in 2005 and 193 in 2015COhorse0 [8]
[31]

Idaho

List of HMAs in Idaho
NameHerd descriptionStateType(s)Pop./AMLRef.
Black Mountain (Owyhee ID)Mixed light saddle type. Some feral horses in Idaho descend from animals turned loose during the Great Depression of the 1930s by local farmers and ranchers. This HMA has horses of good size and conformation due to having released Thoroughbred and Quarter Horse stallions into the herds until 1978. Cavalry remounts also may have been an influence. Wide variety of coat colors, including dun, pinto and Appaloosa.IDhorseAML 30–60 [82]
ChallisMixed origins and significant genetic variation in the herd, but overall larger than most wild horses. Size 1416  hands (5664 inches, 142163 cm) and 900–1,000 pounds (410–450 kg). Original stock probably brought into the area about 1870 by miners and ranchers. Domesticated stallions and several breeds of work horses were released into the area. A 2002 study indicated genetic influence from New World Spanish and North American gaited horses. A dendrogram also indicated influence by draft horse and pony genes.IDhorseAML 185–253 [83]
[84]
Four Mile (ID)Mixed light saddle type. This HMA has horses of good size and conformation due to Thoroughbred and Quarter Horse stallions having been released into the herds until 1978. Cavalry remounts also may have been an influence. Wide variety of coat colors, including dun, pinto and Appaloosa.IDhorseAML 37–60 [85]
Hardtrigger (Owyhee)Mixed light saddle type. The BLM considers the horses managed in this area to be of high quality with good size and conformation due to having released Thoroughbred and Quarter Horse stallions into the herds until 1978. Cavalry remounts also may have been an influence. Wide variety of coat colors, including dun, pinto and Appaloosa.IDhorseAML 66–130 [86]
Sands Basin (Owyhee)Following an emergency gather in 2015 due to wildfire, population dropped to six horses, but was expected to return to AML.IDhorseAML 33–64 [87]
[88]
Saylor CreekMixed light saddle type. Wide range of colors, 1416  hands (5664 inches, 142163 cm), 900–1,000 pounds (410–450 kg) Herd originated from mares from Challis area captured by Mustangers and brought to the area in the early 1960s. A privately owned "registered" stallion was turned loose with the mares and the foals captured in annual roundups until passage of the 1971 Act.IDhorseAML 40–50 [8]
[89]

Montana

List of HMAs in Montana
NameHerd descriptionStateType(s)Pop./AMLRef.
Pryor Mountains Wild Horse Range Colonial Spanish horse type, averaging 14  hands (56 inches, 142 cm), compact, often dun-colored with primitive markings. This HMA began prior to the WFRHBA as a Wild Horse Range created through Secretarial Order in 1968 for the "protection and management of wild horses, wildlife, watershed, and recreation, archaeological and scenic values". The range falls within the jurisdiction of the BLM, USFS, and National Park Service.MT/
WY [lower-alpha 12]
horseAML 90–120 [91]
[90]
[92]

Nevada

List of HMAs in Nevada
NameHerd descriptionStateType(s)Pop./AMLRef.
Amargosa Valley HMANo current populationNVhorse0 [31]
[93]
AntelopeAntelope and Antelope Valley are a combined HMA complex. Army Remount Service added Morgan, Thoroughbred and some draft stallions to local feral stock between 1900 and 1940. Horses in this HMA are noted for hardiness and soundness.NVhorseAML 324 [31]
[94]
Antelope ValleyAt the time of the 1971 Act, local ranchers ran domestic horses of Standardbred and American Quarter Horse bloodlines on the range but were unable to capture all of them. Remaining strays joined existing feral herds, creating mixed bloodlines. Horses currently average 14.2 to 15  hands (58 to 60 inches, 147 to 152 cm).NVhorseAML 259 [31]
[95]
Applewhite HAWild horses move through this area but it cannot sustain a viable herd. Herds from the Delamar Mountains HMA occasionally use this area, which has had a horse population since livestock first arrived in this part of Nevada, and local ranchers had grazing allotments for horses until 1974. Horses in the area descend from ranch and mining stock and cavalry remounts. Horses have characteristics of both light saddle horse breeds and draft horses. Horses are small, 13 to 14  hands (52 to 56 inches, 132 to 142 cm), 600 to 800 pounds (270 to 360 kg).NVhorse24 [8]
[96]
Ash MeadowsNo current populationNVhorse0 [31]
[97]
Augusta MountainsHorses in this HMA exhibit a wide range of colors, solid shades predominant, but also a few buckskins, duns, roans and pintos.NVhorseAML 308 [31]
[98]
Bald Mountain25 acres are needed to support one horse for one month in some places. Relatively large horses with a wide range of colorsNVhorseAML 362 [31]
[99]
Black Rock, Black Rock East, Black Rock WestMost horses are descendants of ranch stock, with a wide range of coat colors. Also contains a few Baskir Curly horses, brought into this part of Nevada.NVhorse121–186 [100]
[101]
[102]
Blue Nose Peak HAHorses in the area descend from ranch stock and cavalry remounts. Horses have characteristics of both light saddle horse breeds and draft horses. Horses are small, 13 to 14  hands (52 to 56 inches, 132 to 142 cm), 600 to 800 pounds (270 to 360 kg). Mostly solid and dilution colors. Part of a complex that also includes Meadow Valley Mountains and Mormon Mountains HAs.NVhorse12 [8]
[103]
Blue Wing MountainsHorses are mostly descended from ranch stock escaped or released into the area. Burros are descendants of pack animals brought into the area by miners and sheep ranchers.NVhorse
burro
27–36 horses, 21–28 burros [104]
Buck and Bald HANow merged into Triple B HMA. Some horses may be descendants of animals abandoned by the Pony Express. Additional stock may have come from local ranches. Some Army Remount horses may have been added up through the 1930s. Horses are reputed to be sturdy and reliable. Size is 14 to 15  hands (56 to 60 inches, 142 to 152 cm). There are also a few Curly horses in the area.NVhorse0 [8]
[105]
Buffalo HillsHorses descend from escaped ranch stock and cavalry remounts. Most are bay or chestnutNVhorse236–314 [106]
BullfrogA small area, 18 miles wide and 14 miles long, suitable for burros but not horses.NVhorse
burro
204/AML 55–91 [8]
[107]
Butte HALand area has been made a part of Triple B HMA. Some horses in the area may be descendants of animals abandoned by the Pony Express. Additional stock may have come from local ranches. Some Army Remount horses may have been added up through the 1930s. Horses are reputed to be sturdy and reliable. Size is 14 to 15  hands (56 to 60 inches, 142 to 152 cm).NVhorse0 (merged) [8]
[108]
Calico MountainMost horses are descendants of ranch stock, with a wide range of coat colors.NVhorse250–333 [109]
CallaghanLarger horses compared to other herds, 1415  hands (5660 inches, 142152 cm), 900–1,100 pounds (410–500 kg) pounds. Descent is from ranch stock and animals used for transportation and mining. A wide variety of color, including pinto, dun and Appaloosa. Curly horses have also been captured. DNA analysis showed high genetic diversity, including light racing and riding breeds, gaited breeds, Morgan, Spanish and Oriental bloodlines.NVhorseAML 134–247 [8]
[110]
Cherry Creek HAHorses may occasionally move into the area from other HMAs, but do not stay. Area has been made part of the Triple B HMA. 103 horses were removed in 1985 and census populations dropped to zero in 1991. Fences now restrict movement from other areas.NVhorse0 (merged) [8]
[111]
Clan AlpineWide variety of coat colors, height 14 to 15  hands (56 to 60 inches, 142 to 152 cm)NVhorseAML 612–979 [112]
Clover Creek HAWas a HMA, now is a HA. Horses in the area descend from ranch stock and cavalry remounts. Horses have characteristics of both light saddle horse breeds and draft horses. Horses are small, 13 to 14  hands (52 to 56 inches, 132 to 142 cm), 600 to 800 pounds (270 to 360 kg). Mostly solid, roan and dilution colors.NVhorse38 [8]
[113]
Clover Mountains HAWas a HMA, now a HA. Horses in the area descend from ranch stock and cavalry remounts. Horses have characteristics of both light saddle horse breeds and draft horses. Horses are small, 13 to 14  hands (52 to 56 inches, 132 to 142 cm), 600 to 800 pounds (270 to 360 kg). Mostly solid, roan and dilution colors.NVhorse214 [8]
[114]
Deer Lodge Canyon HAMerged into Eagle HMA in 2007. Horses in the area descend from ranch stock and cavalry remounts. Horses have characteristics of both light saddle horse breeds and draft horses. Horses are small, 13 to 14  hands (52 to 56 inches, 132 to 142 cm), 600 to 800 pounds (270 to 360 kg). Mostly solid, roan and dilution colors.NVhorse0 (merged) [8]
[115]
Delamar Mountains HAHorses 13 to 14  hands (52 to 56 inches, 132 to 142 cm), 600 to 800 pounds (270 to 360 kg). Descended from stock escaped from ranchers, miners, settlers, and cavalry remounts. Herd shows descent from American Quarter Horses, Arabians, Thoroughbreds, and draft breeds.NVhorse300 [8]
[116]
DesatoyaNo detail given on herd characteristics. Merged from the Smith Creek HANVhorseAML 127–180 [8]
[117]
Diamond, Diamond Hills North, Diamond Hills SouthHorses move freely between the three HMAs of the Diamond complex. Horses have a wide range of colors and types, probably from a mixture of breeds. Local ranchers had grazing leases in this area at the time of the 1971 Act. Any horses on public lands after a claiming period ended were declared wild. Among other light horse breeds, horses in this area include some with American Saddlebred characteristics. Horses were removed from the North HMA following a major fire in 1999. Horses from the Diamond HMAs are reputed to have a quiet disposition.NVhorseAML max 210 (151, 36, 22 respectively) [31]
[118]
[119]
[120]
Dogskin MountainsHorses move between Dogskin and Granite Peak HMAs. Size ranges from 14 to 15  hands (56 to 60 inches, 142 to 152 cm) and horses have strong Morgan horse characteristics.NVhorse100/AML 10–15 [121]
Dry Lake HANow part of Silver King HMA. Army Remount Service added Morgan, Thoroughbred and some draft stallions to local feral stock between 1900 and 1940. Reputed to be strong and healthy due to natural selection.NVhorse0 (merged) [8]
[122]
Eagle HMANo detail given on herd characteristics. Created from merge of Deer Lodge Canyon, Fortification, Patterson-Eagle, and Wilson Creek HAsNVhorseAML 100–201 [8]
[15]
Eldorado MountainsNo current populationNVhorse0 [31]
[123]
Fish CreekOrigin of Curly horse populations in Nevada was a rancher who brought some to this area in 1874. A few are still found here. Other horses are also in the area and have a wide range of coat colorsNVhorseAML 180 [31]
[124]
Fish Lake ValleyVery dry climate and presence of mountain lions result in low horse populationNVhorseAML 65 [31]
[125]
FlaniganHorse show some evidence of draft breeding. Most horses were removed after a 1999 fire and re-released after grazing was re-established.NVhorseAML 80–124 [126]
Fox LakeDescended from ranch stock, have a wide range of coat colors.NVhorseAML 153–204 [127]
Garfield FlatNo detail given on herd characteristics.NVhorseAML 83–125 [128]
Gold ButteBurros of all colors and types are found in an area with a very harsh, dry climate and few sources of water.NVburroAML 98–100 [31]
[129]
Gold MountainGood habitat for burros, but poor habitat for horses, which have been periodically gathered from the range beginning in 1996.NVhorse
burro
15 horses (2005)/AML 0 horses
AML 78 burros
[31]
[130]
GoldfieldGood habitat for burros, but poor habitat for horses, which have been periodically gathered from the range. Forage contains many plants that burros can eat but horses cannot. In 2005 horse AML was 125 but only 4 horses counted; burro AML was 50, but only 17 counted.NVhorse
burro
AML 125 horses
AML 50 burros
[31]
[131]
GoshuteMostly solid colored horses, including some with cream dilution colors or duns. Small, averaging 14  hands (56 inches, 142 cm).NVhorseAML 123 [31]
[132]
Granite PeakNo detail given on herd characteristics.NVhorseAML 18 [31]
[133]
Granite RangeHorses descend from escaped ranch stock and cavalry remounts. Most solid colors are seen, plus a few pintos and Appaloosas.NVhorse193–258 [134]
Hickson Summit HMANo AML established for horses, but there was a 2005 horse population of 43 and burro population of 66. This area is managed by the USFSNVburroAML 0 horse, 16 burro [31]
[135]
Highland Peak HAMerged into Silver King HMA. Horses in this area survive in a particularly extreme range of temperatures from well below freezing in the winter to over 100 degrees in the summer. They are noted for a large number of horses with flaxen manes and tails, descended from an individual stallion known to have been turned out in the area. Most other horses are also solid colored bays and sorrels. Ancestors were ranch stock and cavalry remounts, with characteristics indicating multiple light horse breeds and some draft blood. Height averages 13 to 14  hands (52 to 56 inches, 132 to 142 cm) and weight 600–800 pounds (270–360 kg).NVhorse0 (merged) [8]
[136]
Horse MountainNo detail given on herd characteristics.NVhorseAML 78–118 [8]
[137]
Hot CreekVery dry area with few water sources, horses leave the HMA in the spring and return in the winter; about 74% of the horses actually live outside the HMA boundary. Herd descends from cavalry remounts and are mostly darker solid colors with few white markings.NVhorseAML 25–41 [8]
[138]
Humboldt HAThis is a Herd Area and not managed for wild horses. Nonetheless, horses remained after a 1985 attempt to capture all of them. Origins are not known, and it is possible that some horses migrated into the area from adjacent HMAs.NVhorse282 [139]
Jackson MountainsHorses of dark solid colors descended from ranch stockNVhorse130–217 [140]
Jakes Wash HAHorses in a wide variety of colors and showing influence of many light horse breeds and some possible draft breeds. Most likely descended from ranch stock and possible cavalry remount stallions turned out in the area between 1900 and 1940 to "upgrade" local horses. Was jointly managed with the USFS until 2007, then became a HA in 2008.NVhorse138 [8]
[141]
Johnnie HMAJoint management with the BLM and the US Forest Service. Mojave desert shrub, horses and burros occupy different areas. Last Chance and Mount Sterling HAs merged into this area.NVhorse
burro
50 horses
50 burros
[8]
[142]
Kamma MountainsPart of the Blue Wing Complex, which has a total AML of 553 horses. Population probably descended from ranch stock, Horses are mostly dark solid colors.NVhorse46–77 [143]
LahontanMany horses live outside the HMA, which is small and with an AML much smaller than actual area population. The herd is notable for the large percentage of pinto horses, and a wide range of other colors, including dun. Average height is 15  hands (60 inches, 152 cm) and the herd is noted for good conformation and temperament.NVhorse7–10, but over 100 in the area [144]
Lava BedsHorses descend from ranch stock, mostly dark solid colors but also some duns and buckskins.

Burros descend from pack animals left behind by miners and sheep ranchers. Most burros are gray, but a few are pinto.

NVhorse
burro
89–148 horses
10–16 burros
[145]
Lake Havasu HMAAdjacent to the Chemehuevi HMA Area in California and Havasu in Arizona. Burros descend from those abandoned by miners circa 1858. About 90 percent are gray, the rest black, brown, or pinto. Average height is 48 inches (1,200 mm) and weight is 350 pounds (160 kg)NVburro178 [52]
Little Fish LakeHorses have a wide range of colors. Area is notable for the James Wild Horse Trap in Little Fish Lake Valley, which is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Noted western cowboy writer and artist Will James worked in this area in his younger years.NVhorseAML 39 [31]
[146]
Little HumboldtHorses are a wide variety of colors and descended from ranch stock. Height is 12 to 14  hands (48 to 56 inches, 122 to 142 cm). Part of the Owyhee Complex HMAs, a contiguous group separated only by fences that includes Owyhee, Rock Creek, and Little Humboldt, Little Owyhee, and Snowstorm.NVhorse23/AML 40–80 [35]
[147]
Little Mountain HAHorses migrate between this HA and Miller Flat HA in search of water. Horses descend from ranch stock and cavalry remounts with characteristics of both light saddle horse breeds and draft horses. Horses are small, of many different colors, averaging 13 to 14  hands (52 to 56 inches, 132 to 142 cm), 600 to 800 pounds (270 to 360 kg).NVhorse28 [8]
[148]
Little OwyheeHorses descend from ranch stock. Most are dark solid colors but there are also palomino, buckskin, pinto, gray, roan and white horses. Part of the Owyhee Complex HMAs, a contiguous group separated only by fences that includes Owyhee, Rock Creek, and Little Humboldt, Little Owyhee, and Snowstorm.NVhorse1097/AML 194–298 [147]
[149]
Marietta HMANo detail given on herd characteristics, managed for burros, but about 70 horses also inhabit the area.NVburroAML 104–230 burros [8]
[150]
Maverick-MedicineHorses of a wide variety of colors are descended from ranch stockNVhorseAML 276 [31]
[151]
McGee MountainBurros are mostly gray in color and are descended from pack animals used by miners and sheep ranchers. There is very little water on this HMA, so the burros move off of the HMA for water. Additional burros live on the adjacent Sheldon National Wildlife Refuge, but not under BLM management. The two populations are separated by a fence at the boundary of the refuge.NVburroAML 26–47 [152]
Meadow Valley Mountain HAPart of a complex that includes Blue Nose Peak and Mormon Mountains. AML is zero, but horses within the complex descended from ranch stock and cavalry remounts with influences from a wide variety of breeds ranging from Quarter horses, Arabians, Thoroughbreds to draft horses. Mostly horses are bay and sorrel, but the herd also has animals that are palomino and buckskin. Height is 1314  hands (5256 inches, 132142 cm) and weight is 600–800 pounds (270–360 kg).NVhorse0 [31]
[153]
Miller Flat HASometimes called "Miller Wash," this HA is adjacent to Little Mountain, and the combined HAs are about 146,000 acres (59,000 ha). Horses descend from ranch stock and cavalry remounts with influences from a wide variety of breeds ranging from Quarter horses, Arabians, Thoroughbreds to draft horses. Most horses are solid dark colors, but there are also roans. Height is 1314  hands (5256 inches, 132142 cm) and weight is 600–800 pounds (270–360 kg).NVhorse53 [8]
[154]
Monte Cristo WHTArea contains both BLM and USFS land, all administered by the BLM as part of the Pancake HMA. Horses are 13 to 15  hands (52 to 60 inches, 132 to 152 cm) and of a variety of colors. Most horses descend from ranch stock or miners' animal, but the area also has a Curly horse population brought to the region in 1874 by Tom Dixon.NVhorseAML 236

2005

(merged)

[8]
[31]
[155]
Montezuma PeakAll equines were to be removed in 1996, but a few were missed or strayed in from adjacent HMAs and thus a small population remained. By 2005 there were 19 horses and 25 burros. A 2010 gather set a goal of removing animals to meet a goal of 3 horses and 10 burros.NVhorse
burro
5 horses, 7 burros [31]
[156]
[157]
Montgomery Pass HMANo detail given on herd characteristics. Joint BLM and USFS area managed by the USFSNVhorse173/AML 64–81 [8]
[158]
Moriah HAThis HA has a small amount of private land contained within its boundaries. Horses are descended from a variety of breeds and of uncertain origin, but probably ranch stock. Solid colors, 1315  hands (5260 inches, 132152 cm).NVhorse174 [8]
[159]
Mormon Mountains HAHerd area that is part of a complex that also includes Meadow Valley Mountains and Blue Nose Peak. Horses in the area descend from ranch stock and cavalry remounts. Horses have characteristics of both light saddle horse breeds and draft horses. Horses are small, 13 to 14  hands (52 to 56 inches, 132 to 142 cm), 600 to 800 pounds (270 to 360 kg). Mostly solid and cream dilution colors.NVhorse0 [31]
[160]
Muddy MountainsDesert habitat about 40 miles from Las Vegas, Nevada and boundary includes Lake Mead. Some burros migrate to adjacent National Park Service (NPS) land, and the area is jointly administered by the BLM and the NPS.NVburro50 [13]
Nevada Wild Horse RangeThe HMA is contained within the Nellis Air Force Range and no visitor access or photography is allowed for National Defense security reasons. This was the first officially designated wild horse area in the United States, created in 1962 by a Cooperative Agreement between the Air Force unit and the BLM. The pressure from advocates for wild horses was instrumental in creating this range. The Nellis Range Complex is primarily used for "weapons development and flight training". Wild horses are a secondary use.NVhorseAML 500 [31]
[161]
New Pass-RavenwoodHorses are mostly dark solid colors, a few are of Curly horse type. Area held 945 animals prior to fires in the late 1990s when most were removed until the vegetation could recover.NVhorseAML 476 [31]
[162]
Nightingale MountainsNo detail given on herd characteristics.NVhorseAML 63 [31]
[163]
North Monitor/Kelly CreekJoint HMA/WHT area administered by the USFSNVhorse73/AML 6–8 [8]
[164]
North StillwaterNo detail given on herd characteristics.NVhorseAML 138–205 [8]
[165]
OwyheePart of a complex that includes Little Humboldt, Little Owyhee, Owyhee, Rock Creek and Snowstorm.NVhorseAML 139–231 [31]
[166]
PalmettoAll horses in this area disappeared between 1990 and 1997 for unknown reasons. Theories include predation by mountain lions, or migration to another HMA due to poor habitat, but there was no evidence of a population increase in adjacent areas.NVhorseAML 76 [31]
[167]
Pancake HMAA HMA complex that encompasses Sand Springs West, Pancake, Jakes Wash, and Monte Cristo Wild Horse Territory. Due to drought, a gather in 2012 removed 124 horses.NVhorseAML 240–493 [168]
[169]
Paymaster-Lone MountainSteep, rocky area with very little water, which is poor horse habitat and animals periodically migrate out of the area into other HMAs, especially Montezuma and Silver Peak.NVhorseAML 49 [31]
[170]
Pilot MountainNo detail given on herd characteristics.NVhorseAML 415 [31]
[171]
Pinenut MountainAlso called Nut Mountain. See California entry. HMA located entirely in Nevada but administered by CaliforniaNVhorseAML 179 [31]
Powell Mountain HAHerd area with no current wild equine populationNVhorse0 [31]
[172]
Rattlesnake HAMerged into Silver King HMA. There is no permanent population of wild horses, but herds periodically migrate through the area from Dry Lake, especially during hard winters. Horses descend from cavalry remounts, ranch and mining stock.NVhorse0 [8]
[173]
Red RockFormerly Red Rock-Bird Spring. Mohave Desert area surrounded by mountains. In the summer, burros stay in shaded ravines and horses remain in open areas.NVhorse
burro
AML 50 horses, 50 burros [31]
[174]
ReveilleMost of the horse herd has migrated outside of this HMA due to poor forage. The AML may be set too high for the habitat available.NVhorseAML 138 [31]
[175]
Roberts MountainHorses tend to be larger than those in other wild horse herds in the area. They have a wide range of body types and coat colors. There some Curly horses in this HMA.NVhorseAML 150 [31]
[176]
Rock CreekHorses descend from workhorses and draft horses turned loose by the Ellison Ranching Company, which held a grazing permit for this area at the time of the 1971 Act. Additional ancestry of the herd came from a wide range of breeds descended from ranch stock and settlers' horses. Horses are larger than usual wild horses and have good conformation. Roan horses are particularly common and many horses in this HMA have bold white markings.NVhorseAML 250 [31]
[177]
Rocky HillsHorses in this HMA can be as tall as 16  hands (64 inches, 163 cm) and some have draft traits. Gathers in the area have found Curly horses, as well as many colorfully marked horses such as Appaloosas and pintos as well as some roans, buckskins and duns. Area ranches crossed a variety of light riding horse and draft breeds on Curlies and those horses were the ancestors of this herd.NVhorseAML 143 [31]
[178]
Sand Springs East/WestA combined HMA and HA. Horses have a wide range of coat colors, descended from a variety of light horse and draft breeds brought in by ranchers and miners.NVhorseAML 29–49 [8]
[179]
[180]
SaulsburyHorses migrate between this HMA and the Monitor wild horse territory administered by the USFS. The BLM and USFS jointly administer this area.NVhorseAML 40 [31]
[181]
Seaman Range HAArea with very limited water, which has required emergency removal of the horses in times of extreme drought. Horses are descended from ranch and mining stock dating back to the 1800s. Horses have a wide range of coat colors, notably grays and roans.NVhorse26 [8]
[182]
Seven MileHorses are thought to have descended from ranch stock and are relatively tall and with good conformation, standing between 15 and 16  hands (60 and 64 inches, 152 and 163 cm). They are reputed to have calm dispositions. This area is adjacent to Little Fish Lake and Fish Creek HMAs and the USFS Butler Basin WHT.NVhorseAML 100 [31]
[183]
Seven TroughsHorses are descended from ranch stock, of mostly solid colors, but including a number of buckskins and duns. Burros descend from escaped pack animals and are mostly gray, but a few are pinto.NVhorse
burro
AML 117–156 horses
AML 35–46 burros
[31]
[184]
Shawave MountainsHorses are believed to descend from ranch stock and are of most solid colors, but include some roans and duns. No AML for burros, but some live there.NVhorseAML 44–73 [8]
[185]
Silver KingCreated from merging Dry Lake, Highland Peak and Rattlesnake.NVhorse789/AML 60–128 [8]
[186]
Silver PeakAll horses were removed in 1996, but by 1997 nine new horses had migrated into the area. By 2005, estimated population was 58. A few burros were also counted, though the area is not managed for burros.NVhorseAML 314 [31]
[187]
Snowstorm MountainsHorses probably descended from ranch stock, but there is no specific information known about this herd. They are small, 12 to 14  hands (48 to 56 inches, 122 to 142 cm), and of most solid colors, including palominos and buckskins, as well as some pintos, grays, roans, and whites.NVhorseAML 90–140 [31]
[188]
South ShoshoneHorses are thought to migrate between this HMA and the Bald Mountain and Callaghan HMAs. Horses are larger than most wild horse herds and some are pinto.NVhorseAML 78 [31]
[189]
South StillwaterNo detail given on herd characteristics.NVhorseAML 16 [31]
[190]
Spruce-PequopHorses are of average size, 14.215  hands (5860 inches, 147152 cm), and are of a wide variety of coat colors.NVhorseAML 82 [191]
Stone CabinThis HMA was where the first congressionally approved wild horse gather was held, in 1975. It is part of a complex that includes adjacent USFS land, Nellis AFB and the Reveille HMA. The area includes a unique type of horse called the "Stone Cabin Grey" and these horses were particularly valued by "Wild Horse Annie", Velma Bronn Johnston. Some think they descended from a Steeldust-bred horse from Texas brought into the area by a gunslinger named Jack Longstreet. A number of other horses of Quarter Horse breeding contributed to the herd.NVhorseAML 364 [31]
[192]
StonewallThe habitat is suitable for burros, but not horses. Even though an AML is established for the HMA, there are no horses living there and only a few burrosNVhorse
burro
0 horses, 3 burros/AML 50 horses, AML 25 burros [31]
[193]
Tobin RangeHorses are descended from ranch stock and most are dark solid colorsNVhorseAML 12–19 [194]
Triple B HMANo detail given on horse characteristics, but was created from a merge of Butte, Buck and Bald, and Cherry CreekNVhorseAML 250–518 [8]
[195]
Warm Springs CanyonHorses descend from ranch stock and are found in a wide range of colors. Burros descend from pack animals brought in by miners and sheep herders. Most burros are gray but a few are pinto.NVhorse
burro
AML 105–175 horses
AML 15–24 burros
[196]
WassukHorses descend from ranch stock and average 14 to 15  hands (56 to 60 inches, 142 to 152 cm) and are noted for their surefootedness in the rugged terrain of this area.NVhorseAML 109–165 [197]
Wheeler PassNo detail given on herd characteristics.NVhorse
burro
AML 47–66 horses
AML 20–35 burros
[8]
[198]
Whistler MountainAdjacent to Roberts Mountain HMA and the herd migrates between the two areas. Horses tend to be larger than those in other wild horse herds in the area. They have a wide range of body types and coat colors. There some Curly horses in this HMA.NVhorseAML 24 [31]
[199]
White River HANo detail given on herd characteristics. Downgraded from a HMA to a HANVhorse180 [8]
[31]
[200]
Wilson Creek HAMerged into Eagle HMA. 2005 census showed a population of 521 horses though the area had an AML of 160 at the time. 2015 census is technically zero due to merger.NVhorse0 (merged) [8]
[31]
[201]

New Mexico

List of HMAs in New Mexico
NameHerd descriptionStateType(s)Pop./AMLRef.
Bordo Atravesado HMAOrigins not defined. To increase the genetic diversity of the original herd, horses from unrelated herds were brought into the area, 13 in 1992 and two stallions in 1997 and 1998.NMhorseAML 40–60 [8]
[27]
[202]
Carracas Mesa HMA/Jicarila WHTBLM/USFS jointly administered area because the herd crosses jurisdictional boundaries. Herd has been genetically tested and has a mixed background of cavalry stock, ranch horses and horses originating from the Jicarilla Apache Reservation.NMhorseAML 18–23 [8]
[27]
[203]

Oregon

List of HMAs in Oregon
NameHerd descriptionStateType(s)Pop./AMLRef.
Beatys ButteSome horses show Spanish characteristics, the remainder are assorted draft type or saddle type. Some show Thoroughbred characteristics. Size ranges from 14 to 16  hands (56 to 64 inches, 142 to 163 cm) and 950–1,300 pounds (430–590 kg).ORhorse1,255/AML 150–250 [lower-alpha 13] [205]
[206]
Cold SpringsOriginally of draft horse type, nearly all of the original herd died off in an extremely hard winter in the early 1990s. Horses from other HMAs were brought in to restock, but there were no horses of the same physical type, so the current herd is now of saddle horse type.ORhorseAML 75–150 [205]
[207]
Coyote Lake/Alvord-Tule Springs HACoyote Lake HMA and Alvord-Tule Springs HA managed as one unit because horse herds have a corridor to migrate between them. Many horses are descended from remount stallions of Thoroughbred ancestry, others are of ranch horse type. Herd has had stable characteristics since at least 1975.ORhorseAML 198–390 [8]
[205]
[208]
Hog CreekTaller horses, 1516  hands (6064 inches, 152163 cm), 950 to 1,300 pounds (430 to 590 kg). Genetic analysis found some Spanish ancestry, gaited horse ancestry and a bit of draft horse or possibly pony blood. After a 1997 gather, three stallions from other HMAs were added to the herd to increase genetic diversity.ORhorse62/AML 30–50 [205]
[209]
Jackies ButteMilitary remount type, genetically similar to light racing and riding horses. Selective management to preserve the body type including introduction of horses from other HMAs and removal of undesired animals. Traits include hot‐blooded temperament, small head, good withers, and relatively small feet.ORhorseAML 75–150 [205]
[210]
KigerSpanish mustang type known as the Kiger Mustang. Most horses are dun with primitive markings, some buckskins. Generally 13 to 15  hands (52 to 60 inches, 132 to 152 cm), 750 to 1,000 pounds (340 to 450 kg). Small hooves, Light to medium bone and small feet. Ear tips are often hooked and mares tend to have very fine muzzles.ORhorse130/AML 51–82 [205]
[211]
Ligget TableHerd is very uniform in look, taller, 1515.2  hands (6062 inches, 152157 cm), 900 to 1,150 pounds (410 to 520 kg), mostly chestnut and considered of above average conformation. Isolated population descended from rodeo stock.ORhorse35/AML 10–25 [205]
[212]
Murderer's Creek WHTUSFS-managed area, of which about 33,944 acres (13,737 ha) is BLM land and 31,865 acres (12,895 ha) is USFS land.ORhorseAML 35 (BLM only) [31]
Paisley DesertGenetic analysis of herd shows similarity with Spanish horses and Gaited North American breeds, including the Morgan, American Saddlebred, and Kentucky Mountain Saddle Horse.ORhorse154/AML 60–150 [31]
[205]
[213]
Palomino ButtesLocal ranch stock of saddle horse type, 15 to 16  hands (60 to 64 inches, 152 to 163 cm)1,000–1,300 pounds (450–590 kg). All horses were removed in 1977 due to drought, and those returned are now managed for palomino and red dun color.ORhorse78/AML 32–64 [205]
[214]
PokegamaThe only HMA in the Cascade Range. Smaller horses, 14 to 15  hands (56 to 60 inches, 142 to 152 cm), 900 to 1,000 pounds (410 to 450 kg). Herd thought to date to the early 1900s.OR/
CA
horseAML 30–50 [205]
[215]
Riddle MountainSpanish mustang type known as the Kiger Mustang. Most horses are dun with primitive markings, some buckskins. Generally 13 to 15  hands (52 to 60 inches, 132 to 152 cm), 750 to 100 pounds (340 to 45 kg). Small hooves, Light to medium bone and small feet. Ear tips are often hooked and mares tend to have very fine muzzles. [211] ORhorseAML 33–66 [205]
Sand SpringsPredominantly pinto and buckskin, saddle horse type, 14.2 15.2  hands (5862 inches, 147157 cm), 1,050–1,250 pounds (480–570 kg). Herd is managed for preservation of color and conformation.ORhorse128/AML 100–200 [205]
[216]
Sheepshead/Heath CreekSaddle-type horses 1415.2  hands (5662 inches, 142157 cm) with evidence of Thoroughbred ancestry. Formerly named Heath Creek /Sheepshead, after a 2008 gather, the HMA was renamedORhorse161–302 [8]
[205]
[217]
South SteensHorses are 1416  hands (5664 inches, 142163 cm), 900–1,200 pounds (410–540 kg) managed for pinto color and good conformation. Colors include pinto, buckskin, sorrel, bay, palomino, gray, brown, and blackORhorse662/AML 159–304 [8]
[205]
[218]
StinkingwaterHorses descended from ranch stock and animals abandoned by homesteaders. Horses now managed for light draft horse type. 14.2 to 16  hands (58 to 64 inches, 147 to 163 cm), 950 to 1,350 pounds (430 to 610 kg)ORhorse144/AML 40–80 [205]
[219]
Three FingersHorses mostly descended from homesteaders and ranch stock, with possibly some Army remount horse ancestry as well.ORhorseAML 75–150 [205]
[220]
Warm SpringsHeavy-muscled saddle-type horses, noted for good disposition. "Genetic analysis determined similarity with Old World Iberian breeds followed by North American Gaited Breeds." Ranchers bred horses in the area dating back to about 1900.ORhorse
burro
368 horses/AML 111–202 horses
49 burros/AML 20–25 burros
[8]
[205]
[221]

Utah

List of HMAs in Utah
NameHerd descriptionStateType(s)Pop./AMLRef.
Bible Springs ComplexConsists of four areas, Bible Spring HMA, Blawn Wash, Four Mile, and Tilly Creek. Management to keep horses with historic Spanish Barb characteristicsUThorseAML 30–60 [8]
[222]
[223]
[224]
Blawn Wash HAPart of the Bible Springs complex that also includes Four Mile and Tilly Creek. Management to keep horses with historic Spanish Barb characteristics.UThorse85 [8]
[223]
[224]
[225]
Bonanza HAHorses in this herd area were descended from ranch stock and/or horses from the Uintah and Ouray Indian Reservation. There are also free-roaming horses on adjacent tribally owned landsUThorse0 [31]
[226]
CanyonlandsNo detail given on herd characteristics.UTburro100 [31]
[222]
Cedar MountainHorse herds in the area date to the late 1800s. Horses weigh between 700 and 1,000 pounds (320 and 450 kg). Wide range of colors with black and bay the most common.UThorse290–434/AML 190–390 [222]
[227]
[228]
Chloride CanyonNot currently managed for wild horses or burrosUThorse0 [229]
Choke CherryHorses in this area migrate across state lines into Wilson Creek HMA in Nevada. Ranch stock origins, range from 14.1 to 15  hands (57 to 60 inches, 145 to 152 cm) in heightUThorse20–30 [222]
[230]
Confusion MountainLarge number of grays and other "light colors"; herd is managed to maintain these colors. Origin unknown but ranch stock added over the years, resulting in horses that are a bit taller than other horses in area HMAs.UThorse368/AML 70–100 [222]
[231]
[232]
CongerGenetic study in 2009 showed high genetic diversity and mixed ancestry from North American breeds.UThorse285 AML est. 40–80 [233]
FriscoGenetic testing in 2006 and 2012 showed herd was in genetic equilibrium and is of mixed ancestry, probably from local ranch stock or possibly animals strayed from mining areas nearby. Mostly bays and roans. Adult animals average in size from 14 to 14–2 hands tall.UThorseAML 30–60 [31]
[233]
[234]
Harvey's Fear HAHerd area, not managed for a wild horse populationUThorse25 [31]
Hill CreekNo detail given on herd characteristics.UThorseAML 195 [31]
[222]
KingtopNo detail given on herd characteristics.UThorse40 [31]
[222]
Mount ElinorNot currently managed for a wild horse or burro populationUThorse25 [31]
[222]
[229]
Muddy CreekWeight averages 700 to 1,000 pounds (320 to 450 kg) Origins of horses and burros in the area date to the Old Spanish Trail in the early 1800s with ranch stock added later.UThorseAML 50 [222]
[235]
North HillsJointly managed as the North Hills Wild Horse Management Plan Area with the USFS North Hills Wild Horse TerritoryUThorse250/AML 40–60 [222]
[236]
Onaqui Mountains Concern that genetic variability of the herd was critically low, so horses from other HMAs were added to the herd. Goal to improve adoptability by selecting for size, color and improved conformation. Horses have been in the area since the late 1800s, mostly from local ranch stock.UThorseAML 121–210 [227]
[237]
[238]
Oquirrh Mountain HAHerd area not managed for a wild horse populationUThorse15 [31]
Range CreekOriginal stock may have escaped from the Preston Nutter ranch. Stout with compact conformation 800 to 1,100 pounds (360 to 500 kg), mostly bay and black, a few chestnuts and pintoa.UThorse125 [31]
[222]
[239]
Robbers Roost HAHorses have been in this area since at least 1800, originating from settlers' horses that strayed, followed by horses from local ranch stock. Most horses now are gray, black and roan and weigh between 700 and 1,000 pounds (320 and 450 kg).UThorse33 [8]
[240]
SinbadOriginal horses and burros in the area date to the early 1800s. The owner of a uranium mine, Joe Swasey, also bred horses and brought Thoroughbreds to the area in the late 1800s where they ran on the open range, and also bred Welsh ponies, used in the mining operations. Horses now are black, buckskin, grulla, and bay, 13 to 14  hands (52 to 56 inches, 132 to 142 cm).UThorse
burro
AML 50 horses
AML 70 burros
[31]
[241]
[242]
SulphurHorses are nationally recognized for their Colonial Spanish characteristics. Dun coloring with primitive markings is common. Genetic marker data from 1995 and 2006 showed a "clear Spanish component" in the ancestry of the herd, but some mixed blood as well. Horses often are near a highway and car-animal collisions have occurred. Utah heritage older than horses in other HMAs.UThorse95 (2016)/AML 165–250 [243]
[244]
[245]
SwaseyNo detail given on herd characteristics.UThorseAML 60–100 [246]
Tilly CreekPart of the Bible Spring complex that also includes Bible Spring, Blawn Wash, and Four Mile. Management to keep horses with historic Spanish Barb characteristicsUThorseAML 20–50 [8]
[222]
[223]
[224]
Winter Ridge HAHerd area not managed for a wild horse populationUThorse98 [31]
[222]

Wyoming

List of HMAs in Wyoming
NameHerd descriptionStateType(s)Pop./AMLRef.
Adobe TownDescended from estray ranch horses, many grays and roans.WYhorseAML 610–800 [247]
Antelope Hills Spanish type. Predominantly bay or brown, genetic markers consistent with Spanish Colonial horse breeds. [248] WYhorseAML 60–82 [248]
Conant CreekMixed light saddle type. Geographically contiguous Conant Creek, Dishpan Butte, Muskrat Basin and Rock Creek HMAs are managed individually but with gates left open so horses may migrate freely between them to enhance genetic diversity. AML 320–536 in four combined HMAsWYhorseAML 60–100 [31]
[249]
Crooks MountainNo detail given on herd characteristics.WYhorseAML 65–85 [250]
Dishpan ButteMixed light saddle type. Geographically contiguous Conant Creek, Dishpan Butte, Muskrat Basin and Rock Creek HMAs are managed individually but with gates left open so horses may migrate freely between them to enhance genetic diversity. AML 320–536 in four combined HMAsWYhorseAML 100 [31]
[249]
Divide BasinMixed light horse type, some gaited. Wide variety of coat colors, origins from multiple domestic horse breeds, many closely related to American gaited horse breeds. Size is 14.215.2  hands (5862 inches, 147157 cm) weight 750–1,100 pounds (340–500 kg).WYhorseAML 415–600 [251]
FifteenmileLocation of the first recorded wild horse gather on federal rangeland October, 1938WYhorseAML 70–160 [252]
Green MountainLight saddle type. Mostly solid-colored horses, some tobiano pintos. Size 11 to 15  hands (44 to 60 inches, 112 to 152 cm), 750–1,000 pounds (340–450 kg)WYhorseAML 170–300 [253]
Little ColoradoMixed light horse type, some gaited. Solid, mostly dark colors and some grays, origins from multiple domestic horse breeds, many closely related to American gaited horse breeds. Size is 14.215.2  hands (5862 inches, 147157 cm) weight 750–1,100 pounds (340–500 kg).WYhorseAML 69–100 [254]
Lost CreekMixed light horse type, Spanish horse ancestry possible. A genetic study in 2010 by Gus Cothran of Texas A&M indicated mixed North American ancestry with high genetic diversity and possibly some, limited Iberian ancestry. Most animals influenced by estray domestic saddle stock. Size 14 to 15  hands (56 to 60 inches, 142 to 152 cm), 800–1,000 pounds (360–450 kg) pounds mature weight.WYhorseAML 60–82 [255]
McCullough PeaksModerate to large size, wide variety of coat colors, good conformation, quality horse habitat allows horses to stay in good physical condition. Popular HMA for horse adoptions and tourists.WYhorseAML 100–140 [31]
[256]
Muskrat BasinMixed light saddle type. Geographically contiguous Conant Creek, Dishpan Butte, Muskrat Basin and Rock Creek HMAs are managed individually but with gates left open so horses may migrate freely between them to enhance genetic diversity. AML 320–536 in four combined HMAsWYhorseAML 160–250 [31]
[249]
Rock Creek MountainMixed light saddle type. Geographically contiguous Conant Creek, Dishpan Butte, Muskrat Basin and Rock Creek HMAs are managed individually but with gates left open so horses may migrate freely between them to enhance genetic diversity. AML 320–536 in four combined HMAsWYhorseAML 50–86 [31]
[249]
Salt Wells CreekMixed light horse type, some gaited. Wide variety of coat colors, high percentage palomino and sorrel with flaxen. Origins from multiple domestic horse breeds, many closely related to American gaited horse breeds. Size is 14.215.2  hands (5862 inches, 147157 cm) weight 750–1,100 pounds (340–500 kg).WYhorseAML 251–365 [31]
[257]
Stewart CreekLight saddle type. Wide variety of coat colors, a noticeable number of Appaloosas. Herd has been influenced by routine additions of estray domesticated stock. Size 14 to 15  hands (56 to 60 inches, 142 to 152 cm), 800–1,000 pounds (360–450 kg). Natural gas and uranium produced in the area.WYhorseAML 125–175 [258]
White MountainMixed light horse type, some gaitedWide variety of coat colors including roan and pinto, origins from multiple domestic horse breeds, many closely related to American gaited horse breeds. Size is 14.215.2  hands (5862 inches, 147157 cm) weight 750–1,100 pounds (340–500 kg).WYhorseAML 205–300 [259]

Forest Service wild horse territories

In addition to the Bureau of Land Management Herd Management Areas, the United States Forest Service also has wild horse territories that fall under the Wild and Free-Roaming Horses and Burros Act of 1971. Some are managed in conjunction with the BLM and about 37 are managed by the USFS. Though called "wild horse territories", a few contain burros. Current territories identified as such by the USFS, listed by the state office that manages each, include the following: [11] [12]

Key
USFS Territories are sourced to footnote [11] unless otherwise noted
† Double-listed as a BLM HMA or cooperatively managed with the BLM
†† Current AML is zero, federal land habitat insufficient to support a viable horse population

Arizona

California

Nevada

New Mexico

Oregon

Utah

Notes

  1. See individual listings for details
  2. Examples include Havasu in Arizona, Chemehuevi in California, [33] Douglas in Colorado, [34] The Little Humboldt/Little Osyhee complex in Nevada, [35] and others.
  3. See, e.g. changes between 2005 and 2015. [8]
    [31]
  4. Managed by BLM in Arizona. [41]
  5. managed by Arizona BLM [33]
  6. Most land in Nevada but managed by California BLM [49]
  7. Managed by California BLM [54]
  8. Administered by California [60]
  9. Wholly within Nevada, but California-managed [63]
  10. Wholly within Nevada but administered by California [67]
  11. 8 in 2005 [31]
  12. Crosses state line. Managed by Montana BLM, tourism headquarters in Wyoming. [90]
  13. In November 2015, 1070 of the estimated 1255 horses were gathered and removed from the Beatys Butte HMA. [204]

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Clark County, Nevada</span> County in Nevada, United States

Clark County is a county located in the U.S. state of Nevada, which also comprises the Las Vegas-Henderson-North Las Vegas, NV Metropolitan Statistical Area. The land area of Clark County is 8,061 square miles (20,880 km2), or roughly the size of New Jersey. As of the 2020 census, the population was 2,265,461. Most of the county population resides in the Las Vegas Census County Divisions, which has 2,196,623 people as of the 2020 Census. It is by far the most populous county in Nevada, and the 11th-most populous county in the United States. It covers 7% of the state's land area but holds 73% of the state's population, making Nevada the most centralized state in the United States.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Bureau of Land Management</span> Agency within the US Department of the Interior

The Bureau of Land Management (BLM) is an agency within the United States Department of the Interior responsible for administering U.S. federal lands. Headquartered in Washington, D.C., the BLM oversees more than 247.3 million acres (1,001,000 km2) of land, or one-eighth of the United States's total landmass.

HMA may refer to:

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mustang</span> Free-roaming horse of the Western US

The mustang is a free-roaming horse of the Western United States, descended from horses brought to the Americas by the Spanish conquistadors. Mustangs are often referred to as wild horses, but because they are descended from once-domesticated animals, they are actually feral horses. The original mustangs were Colonial Spanish horses, but many other breeds and types of horses contributed to the modern mustang, now resulting in varying phenotypes. Some free-roaming horses are relatively unchanged from the original Spanish stock, most strongly represented in the most isolated populations.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Colonial Spanish horse</span> American breed of horse

Colonial Spanish horse is a term for a group of horse breed and feral populations descended from the original Iberian horse stock brought from Spain to the Americas. The ancestral type from which these horses descend was a product of the horse populations that blended between the Iberian horse and the North African Barb. The term encompasses many strains or breeds now found primarily in North America. The status of the Colonial Spanish horse is considered threatened overall with seven individual strains specifically identified. The horses are registered by several entities.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Spanish Mustang</span> American breed of horse

The Spanish Mustang is an American horse breed descended from horses brought from Spain during the early conquest of the Americas. They are classified within the larger grouping of the Colonial Spanish horse, a type that today is rare in Spain. By the early 20th century, most of the once-vast herds of mustangs that had descended from the Spanish horses had been greatly reduced in size. Seeing that these horses were on the brink of extinction, some horseman began making efforts to find and preserve the remaining "Spanish Mustangs" drawing stock from feral and Native American herds, as well as ranch stock. The breed was one of the first to be part of a concerted preservation effort for horses of Spanish phenotype, and a breed registry was founded in 1957.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Kiger mustang</span> Strain of mustang horse originating in Oregon, US

The Kiger mustang is a strain of mustang horse located in the southeastern part of the U.S. state of Oregon. The name applies only to wild-captured individuals and does not apply to their bred-in-captivity progeny, which are known as Kiger horses. The Bureau of Land Management (BLM) administers two herd management areas for Kiger mustangs in the Burns District—Kiger and Riddle Mountain, in the Steens Mountain area. DNA testing has shown that Kiger mustangs are descended largely from Spanish horses brought to North America in the 17th century, a bloodline thought to have largely disappeared from mustang herds before the Kiger horse populations were discovered in 1977.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Feral horse</span> Free horses of domesticated horse ancestry

A feral horse is a free-roaming horse of domesticated stock. As such, a feral horse is not a wild animal in the sense of an animal without domesticated ancestors. However, some populations of feral horses are managed as wildlife, and these horses often are popularly called "wild" horses. Feral horses are descended from domestic horses that strayed, escaped, or were deliberately released into the wild and remained to survive and reproduce there. Away from humans, over time, these animals' patterns of behavior revert to behavior more closely resembling that of wild horses. Some horses that live in a feral state but may be occasionally handled or managed by humans, particularly if privately owned, are referred to as "semi-feral".

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Velma Bronn Johnston</span>

Velma Bronn Johnston, also known as Wild Horse Annie, was an American animal welfare activist. She led a campaign to stop the eradication of mustangs and free-roaming burros from public lands. She was instrumental in passing legislation to stop using aircraft and land vehicles from inhumanely capturing wild horses and burros.

Kleppe v. New Mexico, 426 U.S. 529 (1976), was a United States Supreme Court decision that unanimously held the Wild and Free-Roaming Horses and Burros Act of 1971, passed in 1971 by the United States Congress to protect these animals from "capture, branding, harassment, or death", to be a constitutional exercise of congressional power. In February 1974, the New Mexico Livestock Board rounded up and sold 19 unbranded burros from Bureau of Land Management (BLM) land. When the BLM demanded the animals' return, the state filed suit claiming that the Wild Free-Roaming Horses and Burros Act was unconstitutional, claiming the federal government did not have the power to control animals in federal lands unless they were items in interstate commerce or causing damage to the public lands.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Madeleine A. Pickens</span> Iraqi American businesswoman and philanthropist

Madeleine Anne Pickens is a businesswoman and philanthropist who has lived in the United States since 1969. She is a developer of and stockholder in the Del Mar Country Club in Rancho Santa Fe, California, and the owner of the Mustang Monument: Wild Horse Eco-Resort near Wells, Nevada and the founder of Saving America's Mustangs. She is also a thoroughbred racehorse owner and breeder. She is the widow of American businessman Allen E. Paulson and former wife of multi-millionaire T. Boone Pickens.

The Pryor Mountains Wild Horse Range is a refuge for a historically significant herd of free-roaming mustangs, the Pryor Mountain mustang, feral horses colloquially called "wild horses", located in the Pryor Mountains of Montana and Wyoming in the United States. The range has an area of 39,650 acres (160.5 km2) and was established in 1968 along the Montana–Wyoming border as the first protected refuge dedicated exclusively for mustangs. It was the second feral horse refuge in the United States. About a quarter of the refuge lies within the Bighorn Canyon National Recreation Area. A group of federal agencies, led by the Bureau of Land Management, administers the range.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Wild and Free-Roaming Horses and Burros Act of 1971</span> 1971 Act of Congress

The Wild and Free-Roaming Horses and Burros Act of 1971 (WFRHBA), is an Act of Congress, signed into law by President Richard M. Nixon on December 18, 1971. The act covered the management, protection and study of "unbranded and unclaimed horses and burros on public lands in the United States."

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Pryor Mountain mustang</span> American breed of horse

The Pryor Mountain mustang is a substrain of mustang considered to be genetically unique and one of the few strains of horses verified by DNA analysis to be descended from the original Colonial Spanish horses brought to the Americas by the Spanish. They live on the Pryor Mountains Wild Horse Range located in the Pryor Mountains of Montana and Wyoming in the United States, and are the only mustang herd remaining in Montana, and one of sixteen in Wyoming. They are protected by the Wild and Free-Roaming Horses and Burros Act of 1971 (WFRHBA) and managed by the Bureau of Land Management (BLM), who has set the optimum herd number at 120 animals. Genetic studies have revealed that the herd exhibits a high degree of genetic diversity and a low degree of inbreeding, and BLM has acknowledged the genetic uniqueness of the herd. Pryor Mountain Mustangs are relatively small horses, exhibit a natural ambling gait, and domesticated Pryor Mountain mustangs are known for their strength, sure-footedness and stamina. The Pryor Mountains Wild Horse Range is one of the most accessible areas to view feral horse herds in the United States and tourism to the area has increased in recent years.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Free-roaming horse management in North America</span>

Management of free-roaming feral and semi-feral horses, on various public or tribal lands in North America is accomplished under the authority of law, either by the government of jurisdiction or efforts of private groups. In western Canada, management is a provincial matter, with several associations and societies helping to manage wild horses in British Columbia and Alberta. In Nova Scotia, and various locations in the United States, management is under the jurisdiction of various federal agencies. The largest population of free-roaming horses is found in the Western United States. Here, most of them are protected under the Wild and Free-Roaming Horses and Burros Act of 1971 (WFRH&BA), and their management is primarily undertaken by the Bureau of Land Management (BLM), but also by the U. S. Forest Service (USFS)

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Cerbat mustang</span> American horse breed

The Cerbat mustang is a feral horse population of Arizona, found in the Cerbat Herd Management Area in that state. Their main coat colors are chestnut, bay, and roan. While their phenotype is similar to the classic Colonial Spanish horse, the actual origin of Cerbat mustangs is unclear, but they have been identified by DNA testing as of Colonial Spanish horse ancestry, and they are recognized by the Spanish Mustang registry as valid foundation stock for that standardized breed. Cerbats possess the ability to gait.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Onaqui Mountains</span> Mountain range in Tooele County, Utah, United States

The Onaqui Mountains are a mountain range in southeastern Tooele County, Utah United States.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Cold Creek, Nevada</span> Unincorporated community in the state of Nevada, United States

Cold Creek is an unincorporated community in Clark County, Nevada, United States located within the Spring Mountains National Recreation Area and approximately 28 miles by road from the Las Vegas city limits. Cold Creek is named for the stream that flows through the community.

Jackies Butte is a basaltic volcanic field located in southeastern Oregon.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Wild Horse Inmate Rehabilitation Programs</span> American penal rehabilitation program

Beginning in 1988 at Southern New Mexico Correctional Facility, Wild Horse Inmate Rehabilitation Programs provide animal therapy and work experience opportunities for inmates. Correctional facilities work directly with the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) to provide rehabilitation opportunities through working with wild mustangs that have been rounded up due to overgrazing or overpopulation for inmates who fit the qualifications to be a part of the program. Inmates not only work at the equine facilities where the mustangs are held but also participate in training, commonly referred to as gentling, the mustangs to improve their chances of adoption. Tasks include feeding, watering, and grooming the mustangs, as well as mucking paddocks and/or stalls. Inmates who participate in the training of wild mustangs will often be the first person to touch the wild horse and will gentle them to varying degrees, including halter-training, saddle-training, and training them in ridden work. After they have been gentled, most of the mustangs are adopted to various people, including the inmates who gentled them after they have completed their sentence.

References

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  212. "Liggett Table Herd Management Area" (PDF). Bureau of Land Management. Archived from the original (PDF) on May 22, 2016. Retrieved May 8, 2016.
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  218. "South Steens HMA" (PDF). Bureau of Land Management. Archived from the original (PDF) on May 22, 2016. Retrieved May 8, 2016.
  219. "StinkingwaterHMA" (PDF). Bureau of Land Management. Archived from the original (PDF) on May 22, 2016. Retrieved May 8, 2016.
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  223. 1 2 3 "About Blawn Wash HMA". Bureau of Land Management. July 22, 2014. Archived from the original on June 23, 2016. Retrieved May 29, 2016.
  224. 1 2 3 "Bible Springs Complex Wild Horse Gather and Removal and Fertility Treatment Plan – Environmental Assessment (EA) UT-C010-2014-00350-EA" (PDF). United States Department of the Interior Bureau of Land Management. June 20, 2014. Archived from the original (PDF) on March 22, 2016. Retrieved August 1, 2016.
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  227. 1 2 "Cedar Mountain and Onaqui Mountain Wild Horse Herd Management Areas Capture, Treat and Release Plan – Fertility Control with Limited Removal – Environmental Assessment DOI-BLM-UT-W010-2011-0031-EA" (PDF). United States Department of the Interior Bureau of Land Management. January 2012. Archived from the original (PDF) on October 1, 2016. Retrieved August 1, 2016.
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  229. 1 2 "HA and HMA Index Map, Utah" (PDF). Bureau of Land Management. May 18, 2011. Archived from the original (PDF) on March 17, 2016. Retrieved August 1, 2016.
  230. "Choke Cherry – Bureau of Land Management Wild Horse and Burro Internet Adoption". Bureau of Land Management. Archived from the original on June 24, 2016. Retrieved July 18, 2016.
  231. "About Conger Complex HMA". Bureau of Land Management. January 9, 2012. Archived from the original on June 24, 2016. Retrieved May 29, 2016.
  232. "Confusion Mountain – Bureau of Land Management Wild Horse and Burro Internet Adoption". Bureau of Land Management. Archived from the original on June 24, 2016. Retrieved July 18, 2016.
  233. 1 2 "Population Control Research Wild Horse Gather for the Conger and Frisco Herd Management Areas – Final Environmental Assessment DOI-BLM-UT-W020-2015-0017-EA" (PDF). U.S. Department of the Interior Bureau of Land Management. May 2016. Archived from the original (PDF) on June 24, 2016. Retrieved August 1, 2016.
  234. "Frisco – Bureau of Land Management Wild Horse and Burro Internet Adoption". Bureau of Land Management. Archived from the original on June 24, 2016. Retrieved July 18, 2016.
  235. "Muddy Creek – Bureau of Land Management Wild Horse and Burro Internet Adoption". Bureau of Land Management. Archived from the original on June 24, 2016. Retrieved July 18, 2016.
  236. "North Hills Gather". Bureau of Land Management. May 17, 2016. Archived from the original on June 23, 2016. Retrieved May 29, 2016.
  237. "Onaqui Mountain Herd Management Area Fertility Control – Environmental Assessment DOI-BLM-UT-W010-2014-0021-E" (PDF). United States Department of the Interior, Bureau of Land Management. May 2015. Archived from the original (PDF) on March 22, 2016. Retrieved July 18, 2016.
  238. "Onaqui – Bureau of Land Management Wild Horse and Burro Internet Adoption". Bureau of Land Management. Archived from the original on June 23, 2016. Retrieved July 18, 2016.
  239. "Range Creek – Bureau of Land Management Wild Horse and Burro Internet Adoption". Bureau of Land Management. Archived from the original on June 24, 2016. Retrieved July 18, 2016.
  240. "The Robbers Roost Herd". Bureau of Land Management. March 4, 2011. Archived from the original on August 17, 2016. Retrieved August 1, 2016.
  241. "Sinbad Gather". Bureau of Land Management. May 17, 2016. Archived from the original on June 24, 2016. Retrieved May 29, 2016.
  242. "Sinbad – Bureau of Land Management Wild Horse and Burro Internet Adoption". Bureau of Land Management. Archived from the original on June 24, 2016. Retrieved July 18, 2016.
  243. "Preliminary Sulphur Wild Horse Gather Plan – Environmental Assessment (EA) DOI-UT-C010-2015-0011-EA" (PDF). United States Department of the Interior, Bureau of Land Management. December 18, 2015. Archived from the original (PDF) on June 24, 2016. Retrieved August 1, 2016.
  244. "Decision Record – Sulphur Wild Horse Gather Plan Environmental Assessment (EA) DOI-UT-C010-2015-0011-EA" (PDF). United States Department of the Interior, Bureau of Land Management. May 13, 2016. Archived from the original (PDF) on June 24, 2016. Retrieved August 1, 2016.
  245. "Sulphur – Bureau of Land Management Wild Horse and Burro Internet Adoption". Bureau of Land Management. Archived from the original on June 24, 2016. Retrieved July 18, 2016.
  246. "Swasey Gather". Bureau of Land Management. May 17, 2016. Archived from the original on June 24, 2016. Retrieved May 29, 2016.
  247. "Adobe Town". Bureau of Land Management. March 5, 2013. Archived from the original on May 25, 2015. Retrieved June 4, 2015.
  248. 1 2 "Antelope Hills HMA". Bureau of Land Management. Archived from the original on May 12, 2015. Retrieved June 1, 2015.
  249. 1 2 3 4 "Conant Creek, Dishpan Butte, Muskrat Basin & Rock Creek HMAs". Bureau of Land Management. March 5, 2013. Archived from the original on May 25, 2015. Retrieved June 4, 2015.
  250. "Crooks Mountain". Bureau of Land Management. March 5, 2013. Archived from the original on May 12, 2015. Retrieved June 4, 2015.
  251. "Divide Basin". Bureau of Land Management. March 5, 2013. Archived from the original on June 19, 2015. Retrieved June 4, 2015.
  252. "Fifteenmile". Bureau of Land Management. March 5, 2013. Archived from the original on March 7, 2015. Retrieved June 4, 2015.
  253. "Green Mountain". Bureau of Land Management. March 5, 2013. Archived from the original on May 12, 2015. Retrieved June 4, 2015.
  254. "Little Colorado". Bureau of Land Management. March 5, 2013. Archived from the original on May 12, 2015. Retrieved June 4, 2015.
  255. "Lost Creek". Bureau of Land Management. March 5, 2013. Archived from the original on May 12, 2015. Retrieved June 4, 2015.
  256. "McCullough Peaks". Bureau of Land Management. March 5, 2013. Archived from the original on May 12, 2015. Retrieved June 4, 2015.
  257. "Salt Wells Creek". Bureau of Land Management. March 5, 2013. Archived from the original on May 12, 2015. Retrieved June 4, 2015.
  258. "Stewart Creek". Bureau of Land Management. March 5, 2013. Archived from the original on May 25, 2015. Retrieved June 4, 2015.
  259. "White Mountain". Bureau of Land Management. July 20, 2012. Archived from the original on March 7, 2015. Retrieved June 4, 2015.
  260. "Double A WHBT – Bureau of Land Management Wild Horse and Burro Internet Adoption". Bureau of Land Management. Archived from the original on August 17, 2016. Retrieved July 18, 2016.
  261. "Big Bear WBHT – Bureau of Land Management Wild Horse and Burro Internet Adoption". Bureau of Land Management. Archived from the original on August 17, 2016. Retrieved August 1, 2016.
  262. "McGavin WHT – Bureau of Land Management Wild Horse and Burro Internet Adoption". Bureau of Land Management. Archived from the original on August 17, 2016. Retrieved August 1, 2016.
  263. "Big Summit Herd Management Area" (PDF). Bureau of Land Management. Archived from the original (PDF) on May 22, 2016. Retrieved May 8, 2016.
  264. "Murderer's Creek Wild Horse Territory" (PDF). Bureau of Land Management. Archived from the original (PDF) on May 22, 2016. Retrieved May 8, 2016.