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Understanding how management influences forage nutritive value and grazer selection within grazing seasons is an ongoing effort for researchers and land managers globally. We used six, 65 ha pastures managed with patch-burn grazing and stocked with either cow-calf pairs (0.45-0.5 ha • AUM) or gestating ewes (0.4-0.48 ha • AUM-1) to explore how patterns in rangeland forage drive grazer selection in semi-arid rangeland over four summer grazing seasons at monthly intervals. We used near-infrared spectroscopy to determine nutritive value parameters from monthly forage clippings. We evaluated livestock performance as the average daily weight gains of each animal. We used mixed-effect models and ordination to compare patch and grazer types across the time-since-fire gradient and found that time-since-fire was significant for all measured variables. Cattle and sheep consistently preferred recently burned patches throughout grazing seasons. These recently burned patches typically contained available forage with higher crude protein and moisture content, lower biomass, and lower acid detergent fiber, acid detergent lignin, and neutral detergent fiber compared to intermediate time since fire patches and patches burned three years ago. Differences between patch-burn grazing with cattle and sheep were observed as additional patch contrasts for available biomass and crude protein, but grazer type and ecological site were not statistically significant factors for the nutritive value ordination. Our study indicates that patch-burn grazing is capable of imposing and maintaining heterogeneous, grazer selection, forage biomass, and nutritive value patterns desirable for heterogeneity focused land management, regardless of grazer type. These findings are especially relevant to the northern Great Plains where introduced grasses are homogenizing the structural environment of remaining rangelands. With prescribed fire currently an uncommon practice throughout the region, these findings provide a baseline of expectations for practitioners and land managers implementing patch-burn grazing and illustrate how grazing livestock can benefit from the patch contrast in forage nutritive value and biomass.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jenvman.2024.120731 | DOI Listing |
Bundesgesundheitsblatt Gesundheitsforschung Gesundheitsschutz
September 2025
Institut für Public Health und Pflegeforschung, Abteilung Sozialepidemiologie, Universität Bremen, Grazer Str. 4, 28359, Bremen, Deutschland.
Spatiotemporal analysis and monitoring of socially unequally distributed environmental hazards and resources as well as their effects on health provide an important basis for political decisions under environmental justice aspects. Appropriate analysis and monitoring approaches are accompanied by diverse conceptual and methodological challenges, which are described and discussed in this paper.A major challenge lies in the comprehensive modeling of environmental exposures, as measurement data are often only selectively available, requiring complex interpolation methods.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Total Environ
August 2025
Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of Delaware, 127 The Green, Newark, DE 19716, USA. Electronic address:
Chlorpyrifos is a widely used organophosphate pesticide with known aquatic toxicity to freshwater macroinvertebrates. However, less is known about the impact of its presence on stream ecosystem dynamics at environmentally relevant concentrations. This study, through the use of artificial streams, investigated the impact of both chlorpyrifos and dissolved organic matter (DOM) content at (5 μg L and 5 mg C L respectively) on both stream ecology and DOM composition.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnimals (Basel)
July 2025
Tanzania Wildlife Research Institute, Arusha P.O. Box 661, Tanzania.
Savanna systems are characterised by a community of large mammal herbivores with up to 30 species; coexistence is based on resource partitioning. In this paper we analyse the features of the landscape and plant structure which lead herbivores to use particular locations, a key to resource partitioning. The processes involved, top-down versus bottom-up, are well known for large species and small ones but not for medium-sized ones.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Environ Manage
September 2025
Avignon Université, IMBE Institut Méditerranéen de Biodiversité et d'Écologie, Aix Marseille Univ, CNRS, IRD, Site Agroparc BP 61207, 84911 Cedex 09, Avignon, France.
The urgency of restoring ecosystems over vast areas has placed rewilding using wild herbivores at the forefront. However, few scientific studies address its effects on biodiversity and ecosystem functioning compared to more traditional conservation interventions with domestic herbivores. Equus ferus przewalskii horses introduced 30 years ago in the National Park of Cévennes, France - as a step of a conservation program of the species for its reintroduction in Mongolia - now occur as a semi-wild horse population, socially natural (i.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEcol Evol
July 2025
Department of Animal Sciences Hula Research Centre, Tel-Hai Academic College Kiryat Shmona Israel.
Large mammalian herbivores influence grassland ecosystems through plant consumption, return of excreta and trampling, and by altering nutrient cycles and soil properties. These herbivore-mediated changes impact other animals in the habitat, particularly plant-dwelling arthropods. While plant-mediated effects of large mammalian herbivores on arthropod populations are well documented, direct effects, such as incidental ingestion of arthropods, remain understudied.
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