Yes, it does. Ironically the greater the distance, the lower the relative Earth resistance is. In fact you may even say the Earth resistance alone is zero, all you see is "contact" resistance of your earthing system (plus the hooves of the poor sheep or goat that decided to try to go too close to the fence). As that is how the resistance nehaves with distance. By tye way in some rural areas of tge world (USA, Australia) to cover the larger distances at low cost were used power distribution systems called SWER. It is a single wire, really using Earth as the working return conductor. Voltages were in the 20..50kV range, currents bellow 10A. Or many submarine power cables use Earth (or the sea water) as the return path as well, but only in some fault cases (mostly these cables run in pairs for redundancy, but connected so the ground current cancels out during normal operation when both are working).
So for a fence, I would not worry about the Earth resistance. The thing to worry about is rsther the wiring resistance and mainly the total capacitance (the whole net will exhibit way larger load capacitance than a few wires) and leakage of such large fence for a single supply unit... Mainly with sheeps, where you need rather high peak voltages to be effective...
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