It is good to see common sense occurring. Ranch land needs intermittent trees to
provide intermittent shade in the tropics and to dump nutrient rich leaves on
the ground. Cattle need to drift from
one pasturage to another as often as makes good sense to allow strong rich
forage recovery.
This is what they do naturally.
Seeing a herd sit in the same field
all summer never worked too well as grass was taken too soon and as much
freshly trampled to boot.
I suspect that the Sahel in Africa can be put under fifty percent cover from acacia,
while growing full crops underneath in conjunction with forage for the dry season. Fitting cattle into such a regime is
obviously recommended.
Bad husbandry has tradition only
behind it.
Study urges different grazing practices
by Staff Writers
Rotational grazing of cattle on
A study conducted by the Wildlife Conservation Society says grazing
cattle in small areas for shorter periods before moving onto other pastures
results in a greater forage base and larger, more valuable cattle. The practice
also reduces incentives for deforestation, uncontrolled burning and replacement
of native vegetation
with exotic grasses, a conservation society release said Tuesday.
The study showed the forage base of native grasses in Brazil's Pantanal
and Cerrado regions was greater in areas that were rotationally grazed and
produced cattle that were 15 percent heavier.
"The results of this study show a potential win-win situation for
the Pantanal and Cerrado's ranches and wildlife," study lead author Donald
Parsons Eaton of the conservation society said. "Using rotational grazing
techniques will produce healthier cattle for ranchers and help safeguard
wildlife that call home to this incredibly biodiverse region."
Many areas in the region have already been converted to large-scale,
non-sustainable ranching operations, replacing native forests and savannas with
exotic grasses.
While producing high profits in the short term, the technique leaves
behind an impoverished, deforested landscape prone to erosion and drought that
threatens wildlife conservation, cattle health and herd production, the study
said.
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