From Team AWHC <[email protected]>
Subject Bear Family Living in Ecological Balance With Nevada Wild Horses
Date August 21, 2024 8:09 PM
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Jack,

Many of you have been following our Land Conservancy Project, the bold initiative we pioneered last year. This program aims to perserve and enhance key habitats so our iconic wild herds can live wild and free in ecological balance in America’s western landscapes. Click here to support our Land Conservancy Project!! [[link removed]]

FUEL THE LAND CONSERVANCY PROJECT [[link removed]]

Our Land Conservancy Project is focused on three critical areas: land acquisition, habitat restoration, and humane management.

For context, the Bureau of Land Management’s (BLM) own range data indicates that private livestock overgrazing, along with fire and drought, have depleted habitats for all wildlife, including protected species like wild horses and burros.

This preventable habitat deterioration is one reason we took a huge step forward last year by acquiring 3,300 acres of prime habitat within Nevada’s picturesque Carson Valley. The land supports a diverse array of wildlife including the federally protected Fish Springs wild horse herd. We aim to use this innovative project to help set a new conservation standard for wild horse and burro protection. Our dedicated land manager, along with a team of passionate experts, is working on the ground, actively tracking wild horse movements, studying the intricacies of the land, and undertaking vital habitat restoration projects.

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Photo of a Fish Springs foal by John T. Humphrey

We’ve spent the past year compiling photo evidence and scientific insights into how wild horses and local wildlife peacefully coexist, sharing the resources this land provides.

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Photo taken on AWHC land by John T. Humphrey

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Photo taken on AWHC land by John T. Humphrey

AWHC has a strong track record of protecting not only wild horses, but also the land they roam. Our Land Conservancy Project aims to build on this strong record by working to restore meadows, protect creeks and springheads to provide life-sustaining access to water, and reseed areas with native grasses to ensure that wild horses and other wildlife have the resources they need to thrive.

AWHC is proud to have embarked on this groundbreaking — or ground healing — project.

If you’d like to help us support and expand this program to other areas of the West, please consider making a donation today. Your generosity will help ensure we have all the resources we need to make this initiative a success. [[link removed]]

FUEL THE LAND CONSERVANCY PROJECT [[link removed]]

Stay tuned for future updates on the program’s progress and the advancements this program allows us to make. And as always, thank you for standing up for American wild herds!

Onward,

Team AWHC



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[link removed] [[link removed]] [link removed] [[link removed]] [link removed] [[link removed]]This message was sent to you because you’ve shown interest in protecting America’s wild horses and burros. If you wish to sign up for fewer emails, click here. [[link removed]] If you no longer wish to receive emails you can unsubscribe here. [[link removed]] You can help wild horses in more ways than one! Check out all of the different things you can do to help further wild horse and burro protection. [[link removed]]
American Wild Horse Conservation
P.O. Box 1733
Davis, CA 95617
United States
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