The Invasive Species Council has welcomed the NSW Government’s decision to suspend the feral horse rehoming program from Kosciuszko National Park while an investigation is undertaken into the welfare implications of the practice. There is no change to the ongoing program of aerial and ground shooting to reduce the out-of-control feral horse population trashing and trampling the National Park.
‘The Invasive Species Council supports the NSW Government’s decision to suspend the feral horse rehoming program from Kosciuszko National Park while an investigation is undertaken into the welfare implications of the practice,’ said Jack Gough, Invasive Species Council Advocacy Director.
‘While we support rehoming as one management option for feral horses, there must be strict protocols to ensure the high welfare risks involved are reduced.
‘Rehoming feral horses is often assumed to be a more humane option than shooting, but the reality is very different. Horses that are rehomed go through enormous stress and are often injured in the process.
‘The process involves rounding up, capturing, confining and transporting large wild animals that are not used to human contact and are often in poor health already. Many of them are so stressed or sick or injured from this process that they have to be shot anyway.
‘The horses that make it to a rehoming facility then have to be broken so that they are safe for their new owners. This has further welfare implications and there are only a very small number of people with the skills to break a feral horse.
‘Once horses have been through this process, there is then the further issue that many people who like the idea of owning a brumby only want ‘high quality’ horses of a certain size, colour or temperament.
‘Just as with abandoned cats and dogs at the pound, this means for many less desirable feral horses there is no one who wants to take them.
‘Trapping and rehoming of feral horses has been used as the primary management method for feral horses in Kosciuszko National Park for well over a decade but has consistently failed to reduce the population. This is due to the high number of horses and the low number of rehoming options that meet welfare standards.
‘The main impact of relying on rehoming as a management method has been to delay meaningful action and drive up management costs.
‘No one likes to see animals killed, but the sad reality is we have a choice to make between reducing feral horse numbers or accepting the destruction of sensitive alpine homes of our native animals and the trashing and trampling of our mountain streams,’ said Mr Gough.
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