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    • Journal of Range Management, Volume 37 (1984)
    • Journal of Range Management, Volume 37, Number 4 (July 1984)
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    Vegetation and Soil Responses to Cattle Grazing Systems in the Texas Rolling Plains

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    Author
    Wood, M. K.
    Blackburn, W. H.
    Issue Date
    1984-07-01
    Keywords
    plains
    soil
    pastures
    vegetation
    cattle
    Texas
    grazing
    
    Metadata
    Show full item record
    Citation
    Wood, M. K., & Blackburn, W. H. (1984). Vegetation and soil responses to cattle grazing systems in the Texas Rolling Plains. Journal of Range Management, 37(4), 303-308.
    Publisher
    Society for Range Management
    Journal
    Journal of Range Management
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10150/645736
    DOI
    10.2307/3898699
    Additional Links
    https://rangelands.org/
    Abstract
    The influence of cattle grazing on selected vegetation and soil parameters were evaluated on a clay flat range site with shrub zonal, midgrass, and shortgrass communities in the Rolling Plains near Throckmorton, Texas. Measurements were made on one pasture of each treatment during 1977 following 4 to 20 years of grazing treatments. Heavy, continuous cattle grazing had more area occupied by the shortgrass community than midgrass community. Heavily grazed pastures were generally dominated by the shortgrass community, with midgrasses, depending on the degree of utilization, restricted to the shrub zonal community. Conversely, cattle exclosures had no shortgrass community, and deferred-rotation and moderately stocked continuously grazed systems had much midgrass community with the shortgrass community occupying only 30% of the area, thus increasing range productivity. Vegetation and soil parameters within the high intensity, low frequency and heavily stocked, continuously grazed pastures tended to be similar for the midgrass and shortgrass communities, but the shrub zonal community was generally different. Vegetation and soil parameters in the midgrass community of the moderately stocked, continuously grazed treatment were generally similar to shrub zonal and different from shortgrass communities. Vegetation and soil variables in the exclosures and deferred-rotation treatments were generally similar among the midgrass and shrub zonal communities; however, they differed from the shortgrass communities.
    Type
    text
    Article
    Language
    en
    ISSN
    0022-409X
    ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
    10.2307/3898699
    Scopus Count
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    Journal of Range Management, Volume 37, Number 4 (July 1984)

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