*[Enwl-eng] News of the world environment: Room to Roam

ecology ecology at iephb.nw.ru
Sat Jun 21 14:32:53 MSK 2025


What the world’s only wild horse species needs from us is the hardest thing to give.

                              Is this email difficult to read? View in your web browser. >
                             
                       

                                 
                                 
                                 
                                 
                                News of the world environment 
                                 

                                 NEWSLETTER | JUNE 20, 2025 
                                 



                                 
                                 
                                 

                                 
                                 
                                 

                                 
                                 
                                 
                                 
                                 
                                 
                                 
                                 
                                 
                             
                                 
                             
                             
                                Room to Roam

                                WHEN APPROACHING A herd of Przewalski’s horses grazing in the open grasslands of Hungary’s Hortobágy National Park, I try to walk like an old person. Not quite weak and frail appearing, but just slow enough to reassure them that I’m not a threat. If they stare at me, ears pointed forward, I know it means: Please don’t come closer. We don’t know who you are and what you want. I wait quietly until their wariness subsides. This herd has never lived with predators, so the horses are more curious than fearful of an unexpected presence in their midst. Eventually, they resume grazing and allow me to move right up to them.


                                Starting at the edge of the group, I work on identifying each of them. The herd comprises some 270 individuals, bunched together in 30 “harems” — groups within the herd containing one stallion, 5 to 8 mares, and offspring — and about 15 bachelor groups comprising 5 to 7 young and old stallions each. To a lay person, these dun-colored animals, who resemble donkeys more than horses, might all look very similar — stocky, pot-bellied, with thick necks, and short, bristly manes. But I know almost all of them by sight. I have, after all, been monitoring them for 20 years as part of a carefully managed, international effort to bring back this species, which went extinct in the wild in the 1960s. Still, it takes even me a while to tell all of them apart.


                                When I started this work 20 years ago, the reserve had only about 40 horses, and I’d be done in a few hours. Now, it takes me two-to-three days of continuous work to account for all of them.


                                I’m keenly aware that this species would be extinct today but for the decades of efforts by fellow conservationists. Thanks to their dedication, there are now about 2,500 to 3,000 Przewalski’s horses living in nature reserves and zoological gardens in 40 countries across Europe and Asia.


                                With their numbers slowly rebounding, those of us working to save these horses are grappling with a larger question: How can we help them roam free in a world where the human footprint is writ large?


                                Viola Kerekes, project coordinator for Przewalski’s horses in Hungary’s Hortobágy’s Pentezug Reserve, writes about her work with the animals and an international effort to return the world’s only remaining true wild horse species to the steppes of Central Asia.
                                 
                             
                              READ MORE 

                                Photo by Ondrej Prosicky
                                 
                             
                                 
                             
                             
                             
                             Let’s grow the movement! Share this email with an environmentally conscious friend or colleague (or copy this easy signup link).
                              
                             
                             
                                 
                             
                             
                                SUGGESTED BROWSING  
                             
                                Sticky, Slippery, Spikey 


                                “Most … carnivorous botany is small, but the diversity of different trapping mechanisms raises an evolutionary question. Why haven’t carnivorous plants grown to sizes large enough to rival the human-munching plants we repeatedly invoke in fiction?” (Smithsonian Magazine)
                                 
                             
                                Rooftop Battle

                                The weight of the scientific evidence is clear: Light colored roofs cut energy use and reduce heat-related illnesses and deaths. But the “dark roof” manufacturers lobby has been waging a quiet campaign to call this science into question and block new building rules. (Floodlight)
                                 
                             
                                A Wild Tale


                                For decades, national parks have taken a hardline view that forbids state officials from stocking lakes and streams with nonnative fish. Following an epic battle over hatchery-raised trout — and the value of wild places — the North Cascades is the one exception. (Longreads)
                                 
                             
                                The Cowboy Myth

                                “The quick-shooting, horseback riding lone ranger perseveres in the American imagination and symbolizes some of our deeply held values." But that enduring image of "personal grit and defiant autonomy," which colors public perception of modern-day livestock ranchers, is a myth. (The Revelator)
                                 
                             
                             
                                 
                             
                             
                             
                             Did a thoughtful friend forward you our newsletter?
                              What a great friend! Sign up here.
                              
                             
                                 Follow 
                                 
                                 
                                 Follow 
                                 
                                 
                                 Subscribe 
                                 
                                 
                                 
                                 
                                 
                             
                             
                                 
                             
                             
                             Thanks for supporting Earth Island Journal, the independent media arm of the nonprofit Earth Island Institute. Reader donations to our Green Journalism Fund helps to cover the costs of our in-depth investigative reporting on environmental issues.
                              
                             
                       
                       
                                  
                             

                        You are receiving this email newsletter because you signed up on our website. 
                        Make sure we land in your primary inbox: Add Earth Island Journal to your address book.


                        Our mailing address is:
                        Earth Island Journal
                        2150 Allston Way Ste 460
                        Berkeley, CA 94704-1375

                        Copyright © 2025 Earth Island Journal, All rights reserved.
                       

                  From: Editors, Earth Island Journal <editor at earthisland.org>
                  Date: сб, 21 июн. 2025 г. в 03:45
                  Subject: Room to Roam


                 
           
     
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://lists.enwl.net.ru/pipermail/enwl-eng/attachments/20250621/e6dbbb41/attachment-0001.html>


More information about the Enwl-eng mailing list