Study finds cattle grazing has little long-term impact
RENO - Livestock grazing
advocates may have new ammunition in the dispute over the long-terms effects of
livestock grazing.
An article in the Journal of Rangeland Management
released this week documents a comprehensive research project that looked for
differences between grazed and ungrazed rangelands in Nevada.
According to Bob
Conrad, director of marketing communications for the University of Nevada,
Reno, College of Agriculture, Biotechnology and Natural Resources, the study
found few differences among plant populations on grazed land when compared to
land with no grazing.
"Advocates for the removal of livestock often do
not provide scientific evidence of long-term damage from properly managed
livestock grazing," said Barry Perryman, assistant professor of animal
biotechnology at UNR and co-author of the study, called "Vegetation Change
After 65 Years."
"On the other hand, livestock grazing supporters have
little documented evidence of grazing having any beneficial effect on the
land," he said.
A University of Nevada research team, however, sought to
look at grazing from a scientific perspective. The team looked to history for
data.
In 1934, the Taylor Grazing Act established grazing controls on
public land. At that time, the U.S. Forest Service, working with the University
of Nevada's Agricultural Experiment Station and the Taylor Grazing Service,
wanted to be able to measure the recovery rates from prior grazing
practices.
In order to compare grazed rangelands with rangelands that
had been ungrazed, 28 exclosure sites - four-acre parcels enclosed by barbed
wire to keep out livestock - were built at that time. Today, 16 of those sites
remain intact and provided the basis for the study.
"There have been a
lot of exclosure-type studies," Perryman said. "But this is one of the longest,
if not the longest, study of its kind."
To determine what effects the
grazing of large ungulates - cattle and sheep, for example - have had on such
things as the amount and variety of vegetation, the research team conducted
from 2001 to 2002 a meticulous examination of the ecologies both inside and
outside the exclosures.
The researchers then subjected their findings to
a thorough statistical analysis, according to Conrad.
After analyzing
the data, the researchers concluded that "light-to-moderate grazing in the
Great Basin certainly has no ill effects on the ecosystem."
What few
differences exist between grazed and ungrazed rangelands are minor and "can
even be somewhat beneficial," Perryman said.
One such benefit is that
within the exclosures there is more vegetative ground cover, while outside
there are more plants as well as a greater variety of plants.
The study
specifically addresses the view that rangelands are irreparably damaged by
domestic grazing in the Great Basin and should subsequently be off-limits to
livestock.
Perryman said the study has the potential to help resolve the
sometimes bitter debate between ranchers who have a legal right to graze
livestock and those who believe that grazing does harm.
"From an
ecological standpoint we can argue that if we remove the grazing infrastructure
from public rangelands, we would see some adverse consequences," he said. "We'd
see less variety and too much ground cover, for example, as well as more
cheatgrass and the potential for more range fires."
Cheatgrass is a
highly flammable invasive weed. In areas dominated by cheatgrass, fires that
historically occurred once every 50 to100 years are now occurring every two to
five years, according to the researchers.
The exclosures appear to
contain more cheatgrass than the grazed areas, Perryman said.
Graduate
student Danielle Courtois, now with the U.S. Bureau of Land Management in New
Mexico, was the lead author of the study. Animal biotechnology Associate
Professor Hussein Hussein of Nevada is also a co-author.