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Mustangs from Bureau of Land Management Tested in Rutgers Program

Last Updated: November 05, 2009 Related resource areas: Horses

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Four yearling BLM mustangs are being compared in both training and growth performance to four unhandled draft cross weanlings.

Released October 4, 2009

NEW BRUNSWICK, N.J. – For 10 years, the Young Horse Teaching and Research program has focused upon the unique nutritional and behavioral needs of draft cross weanlings and yearlings from ranches collecting pregnant mare urine in North Dakota and Canada.

Up to this year the program worked with foals registered by the North American Equine Ranching Information Council (NAERIC) to better understand this increasingly popular type of horse on which there was little scientific information. These horses are now well-recognized as valuable equine animals, commanding high prices even as weanlings, and a great deal has been learned about their nutritional needs and behavior. Because NAERIC horses now have well-established markets in a variety of disciplines, they are no longer "at risk" for finding good homes and athletic careers.

Thousands of Bureau of Land Management (BLM) mustangs are removed from public ranges annually to prevent overgrazing. These horses are in need of help and good homes. While not the same as the larger, heavier draft-crosses, they too can be equine athletes, excelling in a wide variety of disciplines. The general public’s perception is that mustangs are "wild," difficult to handle and not very useful. We hope to help change that perception.

This year we are "re-inventing" the Young Horse Teaching and Research program. We will select four yearling BLM mustangs to incorporate into our research. These four horses will be compared in both training and growth performance to the four unhandled weanlings we will receive from our known bloodlines in North Dakota and the four draft cross yearlings left over from the 2009 program.

We anticipate that the mustangs will not be too different to train than our unhandled NAERIC weanlings. By selecting yearlings based on the conformation and behavior criteria we have established over the years, we expect to produce very attractive, well behaved young horses with tremendous athletic potential by the end of the school year for the Annual Young Horse Auction on April 26, 2010. See their progress on the Young Horse Teaching and Research Program site at http://www.rci.rutgers.edu/~ruhorse/newsflash.html.

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http://www.esc.rutgers.edu/younghorse.htm

Source: Dr. Sarah Ralson, ralston@aesop.rutgers.edu


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