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Future
  Freedom on a gentle drip
Despite the fascination and enthusiasm it must be kept in mind that the Wild Horses also raise questions. The area around Garub is situated on the eastern fringe of the Namib Desert. Rainfalls are rare and unreliable - often just enough for succulents, prickly shrubs and grasses. Still, the horses usually find sufficient grazing. But years of drought occur regularly on the fringes of the Namib. Like in 1991/92, or in 1998/99, when the horses were starving and weaker animals perished. The public outcry in Namibia and far beyond the borders resulted in costly efforts to catch or feed the horses. In both cases success was only moderate – mainly because action was taken too late. Many horses were already weakened to a point where feeding did not help anymore, or they succumbed to the strain of being caught.
 
   
  The horses do not pose a threat to indigenous animals.
Photo: Telané Greyling
 
  Another problem touches on the principles of nature conservation. The horses live mostly in state-owned Namib Naukluft Park, which is supposed to protect the indigenous flora and fauna. The area around Aus is seen as a biological hotspot – with more than 500 plant species, some of them endemic, which means that they do not occur anywhere else. What if the horses were a disruptive element in their environment and contributed to unique plants becoming extinct? What does the presence of the Wild Horses mean for the management plan of the nature reserve? Can they be treated like game, to be simply abandoned in years of drought? Or should there be some intervention? If so, what form should it take?  
   
  Especially in times of drought horses cross the tar road in order to find grazing on the other side. Photo: Telané Greyling  
 
South African biologist Telané Greyling has dealt with these and other questions in her thesis on the Wild Horses. Her work was supported by the Ministry for the Environment and Tourism, by the lodge and tour company Klein Aus Vista as well as the other partners of the Gondwana Desert Collection. Greyling found no indication that the horses displace the indigenous flora or fauna. She stated that by and large the same species and same numbers of individuals which are found in nearby areas of comparison occur also in the area where the horses live.  
Biologist Telané Greyling.
 
  Measures of moderation
Clearly the horses cannot be regarded as game like gemsbok or springbok. But they are no longer domesticated animals either and as part of ‘the wilds’ are subject to nature’s rules. Therefore the death of weak animals in times of drought is the natural cycle taking its course. On the other hand, man cannot simply deny all responsibility. Fences block access to natural watering places and better grazing on farms bordering the area to the east (a death-trap for gemsbok as well, by the way). And in times of drought the number of animals might drop so severely that the gene pool is affected negatively and their survival endangered by inbreeding. Saying yes to the horses is therefore also a yes to preservation.
 
  In November 2005 a meeting of experts agreed on possible goals for preservation: to ensure a stable population of Wild Horses, to keep the costs for their care as low as possible, to utilise their attraction more efficiently for tourism, to gather more information on the animals and improve public knowledge about them.  
 
A prerequisite for controlling the horse population is to monitor rainfall, grazing, the numbers and the condition of the animals on a regular basis. It was agreed that the reference value for a stable population is 130, with short-term fluctuations between 80 and 180. Such fluctuations occurred in the past as well. During the seventies and eighties the number of horses was estimated at 250, but it dropped considerably when fences were put up at the area’s eastern boundary in the late eighties. 104 horses were caught in June 1992. There were 110 horses in 1993, an increase to 149 in 1997, in 1999 the number dropped to just 89, and in early 2006 it was back to about 150 animals.  
The death of weak animals is part of the natural cycle.
Photo: Telané Greyling
 
  The expert team also recommends that intervention should be limited to the event of a crisis emerging and that appropriate steps should always be kept at a minimum. In times of drought a watering place could initially be set up in a neighbouring grazing area to shorten the horses’ trip to the water. Even though they have adapted to the arid conditions and can go without water longer than domestic horses and without suffering stress, they spend the more energy the longer the distance between grazing and water. Should the condition of the horses deteriorate, lucerne should be made available as additional fodder. In this case it is important to spread fodder over a wide area in order to prevent competition which causes stress or even fighting.  
  Proposals were also put forward for catching horses as an advance measure of keeping the population stable. Capture will only be considered when the population reaches a maximum limit of 200 individuals. Young animals (2 to 4 years) and equal numbers of mares and stallions should be chosen from the herd to avoid long-term disruptions in their social structure. Such disruptions were caused when more than 100 horses, regardless of age or gender, were caught in 1992.  
 
Some progress has already been made in reaching the third goal, namely, to ‘utilize’ the attraction of the horses more efficiently. Not only can visitors watch the horses from the shelter at the drinking trough near Garub, but since the middle of 2006 they can also obtain all the background information at Aus Information Centre, just 20 km away. The centre serves as a source of income for the community of Aus. At some stage in the more distant future it could be combined with a wild horse research centre.
Results of the research could thus be passed on to visitors from Namibia and abroad.
 
The drinking trough at Garub; the shelter for visitors is in the background. Photo: Telané Greyling
 
 

Visitors protect horses
The Aus Information Centre already has instructions in place on how visitors can themselves contribute to the horses' protection:
- Take special care on the tar road.
- Do not get too close to the horses at the drinking trough at Garub;
- tourists often cause foals to be separated from their mothers.
- Keep your distance for your own protection, too. The horses are not
- aggressive, but serious injury may be sustained through their
- careless movements or kicks.
- Please refrain from feeding at all times. Feeding results in
- competitive behaviour. Kicking and biting one another puts foals at
- great risk.

 
© 2007 Nature Investments (Pty) Ltd
  - More pictures at www.namibhorses.com
- For a detailed media release see
- www.gondwana-desert-collection.com