The Bureau of Land Management on Friday completed the capture and removal of 129 burros from the Marietta Wild Burro Range.
The agency used bait and water trapping to capture 62 jennys, 49 jacks and 18 foals from July 17-Aug. 4. BLM reported no injuries.
Before the roundup, the estimated burro population on the 68,000-acre range stood at 341, compared to an agency-assigned “Appropriate Management Level” of 78-104 burros.
In 1991, when Marietta was designated as the nation’s first wild burro range, in Mineral County, Nev., there were no wild horses there; now there are about 48, according to BLM. The agency says that the wild horses likely originated from the nearby Garfield Flat or Reveille Herd Management Areas.
The agency says the growing numbers of burros and wild horses have led to increased competition for forage and water on the range, which is also home to bighorn sheep and pronghorn.
“This has led to animals leaving the range and moving into the vicinity of the state highways and has resulted in numerous vehicle collisions creating public safety and animal health risks,” according to a BLM press release.
Between April 2015 and June 2017, 28 burros have been struck and killed along Highway 95 and State Routes 359 and 360, according to the decision record.
There are no private livestock on the burro range, according to BLM.
BLM issued a 2011 decision to remove wild horses and burros from the area using helicopter trapping as well as bait and water trapping, but did not move forward due to lack of funding.
Captured burros and wild horses were transported to the Indian Lakes facility located in Fallon, Nev., and later offered for adoption.