SB 655
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AN ACT
RELATING TO ANIMALS; REQUIRING TESTS OF CONFORMATION, HISTORY
AND DEOXYRIBONUCLEIC ACID, WHEN WILD HORSES ARE CAPTURED;
REQUIRING SPANISH COLONIAL HORSES TO BE RELOCATED TO HORSE
PRESERVES; ALLOWING EUTHANASIA; ALLOWING FOR ADOPTION;
PROVIDING FOR THE CONTROL OF WILD HORSE POPULATIONS BY MEANS
OF BIRTH CONTROL.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO:
Section 1. WILD HORSES--CONFORMATION, HISTORY AND
DEOXYRIBONUCLEIC ACID TESTING--SPANISH COLONIAL HORSES--BIRTH
CONTROL.--
A. As used in this section:
(1) "public land" does not include federal
land controlled by the bureau of land management, the forest
service or state trust land controlled by the state land
office;
(2) "range" means the amount of land
necessary to sustain a herd of wild horses, which does not
exceed its known territorial limits;
(3) "Spanish colonial horse" means a wild
horse that is descended from horses of the Spanish colonial
period; and
(4) "wild horse" means an unclaimed horse on
public land that is not an estray.
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SB 655
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B. A wild horse that is captured on public land
shall have its conformation, history and deoxyribonucleic
acid tested to determine if it is a Spanish colonial horse.
If it is a Spanish colonial horse, the wild horse shall be
relocated to a state or private wild horse preserve created
and maintained for the purpose of protecting Spanish colonial
horses. If it is not a Spanish colonial horse, it shall be
returned to the public land, relocated to a public or private
wild horse preserve or put up for adoption by the agency on
whose land the wild horse was captured.
C. If the mammal division of the museum of
southwestern biology at the university of New Mexico
determines that a wild horse herd exceeds the number of horses
that is necessary for preserving the genetic stock of the herd
and for preserving and maintaining the range, it may cause
control of the wild horse population through the use of birth
control and may cause excess horses to be:
(1) humanely captured and relocated to other
public land or to a public or private wild horse preserve;
(2) adopted by a qualified person for
private maintenance; or
(3) euthanized; provided that this option
applies only to wild horses that are determined by a
veterinarian to be crippled or otherwise unhealthy.