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GRAND JUNCTION, Colo.—The federal Bureau of Land Management hopes spaying will help control wild horse herds, a plan opponents say is possibly dangerous and unproven.

A lot of research would be required before the program goes into effect.

The BLM has already tried contraceptives, which haven’t worked well to reduce herd sizes. Birth-control drugs are effective for less than two years and require expensive repeat roundups.

Initially, the agency will seek recommendations from veterinarians about the best way to conduct field spayings. If those veterinarians give their approval, the BLM plans to try out the procedure in holding facilities, followed by research in the field, before implementing any widespread program.

“We will be proceeding on this soon. It’s a very high priority for us. We are going to proceed carefully and responsibly,” said Dean Bolstad, the BLM’s wild horse and burro senior adviser.

The agency is looking at new measures because there is a lack of space for more horses in holding facilities, which already are home to more than 37,000 wild horses and burros.

Last year, the federal agency spent $43 million to maintain those animals in captivity. Adoptions of wild horses have dropped from 7,600 in 2001 to about 2,500 last year.

Wild-horse activists have criticized the procedure, saying that spaying mares in the field would amount to mutilation. Researchers recommend using water and food as bait to corral horses long enough to treat them.

Tim Harvey, the wild-horse advocate on a national advisory board, said the procedure is government-approved and has been used safely on race horses.

The BLM in 2011 planned to spay mares that had been rounded up before returning them to a herd-management area in Wyoming but backed off, saying that more research was needed.

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Information from: The Denver Post,

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