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    • Rangeland Ecology & Management, Volume 71 (2018)
    • Rangeland Ecology & Management, Volume 71, Number 5 (September 2018)
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    Diverse Management Strategies Produce Similar Ecological Outcomes on Ranches in Western Great Plains: Social-Ecological Assessment

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    Author
    Wilmer, H.
    Augustine, D.J.
    Derner, J.D.
    Fernández-Giménez, M.E.
    Briske, D.D.
    Roche, L.M.
    Tate, K.W.
    Miller, K.E.
    Issue Date
    2018-09
    Keywords
    decision making
    ecological heterogeneity
    grazing management
    rancher
    semiarid rangelands
    
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    Show full item record
    Citation
    Wilmer, H., Augustine, D. J., Derner, J. D., Fernández-Giménez, M. E., Briske, D. D., Roche, L. M., ... & Miller, K. E. (2018). Diverse management strategies produce similar ecological outcomes on ranches in Western Great Plains: social-ecological assessment. Rangeland Ecology & Management, 71(5), 626-636.
    Publisher
    Society for Range Management
    Journal
    Rangeland Ecology & Management
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10150/671068
    DOI
    10.1016/j.rama.2017.08.001
    Additional Links
    https://rangelands.org/
    Abstract
    Experiments investigating grazing systems have often excluded ranch-scale decision making, which has limited our understanding of the processes and consequences of adaptive management. We conducted interviews and vegetation monitoring on 17 ranches in eastern Colorado and eastern Wyoming to investigate rancher decision-making processes and the associated ecological consequences. Management variables investigated were grazing strategy, grazing intensity, planning style, and operation type. Ecological attributes included the relative abundance of plant functional groups and categories of ground cover. We examined the environmental and management correlates of plant species and functional group composition using nonmetric multidimensional scaling and linear mixed models. After accounting for environmental variation across the study region, species composition did not differ between grazing management strategy and planning style. Operation type was significantly correlated with plant community composition. Integrated cow-calf plus yearling operations had greater annual and less key perennial cool-season grass species cover relative to cow-calf − only operations. Integrated cow-calf plus yearling ranches were able to more rapidly restock following drought compared with cow-calf operations. Differences in types of livestock operations contributed to variability in plant species composition across the landscape that may support diverse native faunal species in these rangeland ecosystems. Three broad themes emerged from the interviews: 1) long-term goals, 2) flexibility, and 3) adaptive learning. Stocking-rate decisions appear to be slow, path-dependent choices that are shaped by broader social, economic, and political dynamics. Ranchers described having greater flexibility in altering grazing strategies than ranch-level, long-term, annual stocking rates. These results reflect the complexity of the social-ecological systems ranchers navigate in their adaptive decision-making processes. Ranch decision-making process diversity within these environments precludes development of a single “best” strategy to manage livestock grazing.
    Type
    Article
    text
    Language
    en
    ISSN
    1550-7424
    EISSN
    1551-5028
    ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
    10.1016/j.rama.2017.08.001
    Scopus Count
    Collections
    Rangeland Ecology & Management, Volume 71, Number 5 (September 2018)

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