Wild Mustang Research Paper

Words: 429
Pages: 2

Horses, particularly wild ones, seem to embody both freedom and strength. When you think of the mustang and stallion, you think of nobility. Wild mustangs have always been a symbol of the American frontier, but today, they face many trials, including: extinction, abuse, and eviction from their natural lands.

The wild horse is a species of the genus equus ferus. The wild mustang includes a subspecies of the modern domesticated horse. The wild horse is a descendant of the domestic horse from Europe which was brought over to the United States from Spain. The name mustang came from the Spanish word mustengo which means ownerless beast. The mustang received its name because of its very reckless nature and the fact that they were hard to tame.

The domestication of the early horse took place in the region of the Black Sea over 4,000 years ago. The domestication of the horse was the engine that changed the history of the transportation, warfare, and exploration of the world.
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In 1971, a federal law was passed that banned the capturing, harming, or killing of free-roaming horses or burros on public land. The care and management of the wild horse herds on federal land was then turned over to the Bureau of Land Management. Today, about 50,000 wild horses liv eon private ranches, wildlife refuges, Native American reservations, federal lands, and in sanctuaries. Many of these areas are rugged and dry environments where the wild horses must work hard to survive. The future of wild horses on federal ranges is now in transition as the court system battles the status of the ban on wild horse slaughter.

Wild horses are amazing creatures. They have survived for thousands of years and have overcome many hardships. Despite the trials that threated to end their existence, they long to gallop across the plains, freely and