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Return to Freedom strives to keep wild horses in their original family and social groups, maintaining their unique genetic lines so they may continue to evolve without the threat of capture or removal. |
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Return to Freedom is affiliated with the Choctaw Horse Conservation Program, a project created by mustang preservationist and screenwriter John Fusco. This project, which is designed to preserve the almost extinct Choctaw horse, is a harmonious relationship with Return to Freedom's rare breeds preservation program.
Committed to preserving the many rare and diverse bloodlines that define the American wild horse of today, Return To Freedom preserves diverse herds maintained in separate areas according to their geographic origins. Some of the herds represent horses with DNA similar to the primitive Iberian horses (the Sorrias), some are direct and undiluted descendents of Padre Kino's original Spanish Mission strain which arrived in the 1600's, while others represent descendents of calvary horses and ranch horses that have interbred on our public and park lands reverting to a natural state over the past 500 years. Whatever their historical, genetic or biological significance, the wild horses of today represent their evolution in their respective habitats. The bone density, the longer cannon bone and other physiological and sociological changes that have occurred make them what they are today. While geneticist Dr Gus Cothran (University of Kentucky) observes that the past 20 years we have witnessed the disintegration of domestic horse breeds, wild horses continue to adapt and survive against all odds. This unique adaptability and hardiness simply cannot be replicated in domestic breeding situations. It is with this conscience that we recognize the American Wild Horse of Today as a re-introduced native wildlife species. Their resilience throughout the years in the face of mounting threats, has earned the American wild horse their rightful place on the most uninhabitable areas of America's public lands as expressed in The Wild Free Roaming Horse and Burro Act of 1971, the will of the people.
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