
A 14-year study by ARS scientists found that
rangelands that have been grazed by cattle recover from fires more effectively
than rangelands that have been protected from livestock; a surprising finding
that could impact management strategies for native plant communities. Photo
courtesy of Tony Svejcar, ARS.
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Livestock Can Help Rangelands Recover from Fires
By Ann Perry
September 30, 2009 A 14-year study by
Agricultural Research Service (ARS)
scientists in Oregon found that rangelands that have been grazed by cattle
recover from fires more effectively than rangelands that have been protected
from livestock. These surprising findings could impact management strategies
for native plant communities where ecological dynamics are shifting because of
climate change, invasive weeds and other challenges.
Much of the rangeland in the western United States is threatened by the
spread of cheatgrass and medusahead, invasive non-native annual grasses that
fuel wildfires and readily infest landscapes, especially after fires. These
rangelands historically were burned by wildfires every 50 to 100 years, but
over the past century these fires have been suppressed by humans. This
suppression allowed some dead plant litter to accumulate, but when cattle were
introduced to the region, their grazing helped keep litter accumulation in
check.
Rangeland scientists
Kirk
Davies and
Jon
Bates and research leader
Tony
Svejcar, who work in the
ARS
Range and Meadow Forage Management Research Unit at the
Eastern Oregon Agricultural
Research Center in Burns, Ore., carried out studies comparing how native
plants on grazed and ungrazed sagebrush rangelands recovered from fires. All
the sites had similar vegetation profiles and were virtually free of
cheatgrass.
In the grazed areas, cattle consumed around 40 percent of the available
forage, which removed much of the potential litter. The ungrazed sites, where
livestock had been excluded since 1936, had almost twice as much litter as the
grazed sites.
The scientists conducted a controlled burn on all the sites in 1993, and
then measured vegetation cover, vegetation density and biomass production in
2005, 2006 and 2007. They found cheatgrass had infested a large portion of the
ungrazed sites, leaving these areas even more vulnerable to future fires.
However, cheatgrass did not become problematic on the sites that had been
grazed. On these sites, native bunchgrass cover was almost twice as dense as
bunchgrass cover on the ungrazed sites. The team concluded that the litter in
the ungrazed sites fueled hotter fires that killed off much of the perennial
vegetation, which allowed quick-growing invasive annuals to become established.
Results from this study were published in the September 2009 issue of Ecological
Applications. This study supports the USDA research priority of
responding to global climate change.
ARS is the principal intramural scientific research agency of the
U.S. Department of Agriculture.