A story by Phoenix New Times says a strike-everything amendment would place a three-year moratorium on wild horse removals from the Lower Salt River while researchers conduct a genetic viability study examining how many animals are needed to maintain a healthy breeding population.
The bill cleared the Arizona Senate in February and has been taken up by the House, where legislators have proposed several amendments.
The House engrossed version states that the population was 273 as of March 28, with a negative growth rate due to a successful fertility control program—which has evolved into a mass sterilization program because it has exceeded the window of reversibility.
Simone Netherlands, instigator of the program, thinks the state is pushing the herd toward long-term genetic collapse.
But it’s a fait accompli—she and her field workers have already done it.

You cannot maintain genetic diversity when the birth rate and breeding population are essentially zero and will stay at zero because the mares have been ruined by fertility control pesticides.
The article noted that the bill, if approved by the House, will have to go back to the Senate for ratification of amendments.
RELATED: Salt River Advocates Hitting Mares in the Back?
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