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 A breeding group of
Hereford cattle graze native rangeland at the Fort Keogh Livestock and Range
Research Laboratory at Miles City, Mont. Click the image for more
information about it.
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Seeded Pastures Can Sustain Cattleand Native
Rangelands
By Erin
Peabody February 14, 2006
Reducing grazing pressure on native rangelands and keeping herds of
cattle adequately nourished can be compatible goals, according to Agricultural
Research Service (ARS) scientists. It
just takes the right grazing strategy.
Marshall
Haferkamp, a rangeland scientist at the agency's
Fort
Keogh Livestock and Range Research Laboratory in Miles City, Mont., has
found that using pastures seeded to certain cool-season perennial grasses can
provide animals with ample nutrition, especially during the months when lush,
green forage is hard to come by.
In addition, ranchers can use these seeded pastures to shift grazing
pressure away from native rangelands in the spring and autumn, allowing
possibly fragile or recuperating sites to recover.
In the semiarid regions of eastern Montanawhere the Miles City
laboratory is locatedranching on native rangelands means relying to a
large degree on Mother Nature. According to Haferkamp, the rains that come in
April, May and June usually determine how much forage is available in a given
year for grazing cattle.
This unpredictability is one of the reasons Haferkamp wanted to
explore selected cool-season grassesfor grazing in the spring and
autumnas potential forages for rounding out a herd's yearly nutritional
needs.
Not only would the grasses need to take well to the Northern Great
Plains environment, they would also need to be digestible and nutritious for
cattle.
Working in collaboration with ARS animal nutritionist
Elaine
Grings and ARS geneticist
Michael
MacNeil, Haferkamp found that cattle gained more weight in the spring and
autumn while grazing on seeded pastures than on native rangelands.
The most promising cultivars included spring cultivar "Hycrest"
crested wheatgrass and autumn cultivar "Prairieland" Altai wildrye. "Hycrest"
was developed by plant breeders at ARS'
Forage
and Range Research Laboratory in Logan, Utah.
To
learn more about Haferkamp's forage studies, see the February issue of
Agricultural Research magazine.
ARS is the U.S. Department of
Agriculture's chief scientific research agency.