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Semiarid rangelands throughout the western Great Plains support livestock production and many other ecosystem services. The degree to which adaptive multi-paddock (AMP) grazing management approaches can help achieve desired ecosystem services remains unclear. At the Central Plains Experimental Range in northeastern Colorado, a management-science partnership with a diverse stakeholder group is comparing collaborative adaptive rangeland management (CARM), designed to incorporate AMP principles, to traditional rangeland management (TRM), consisting of season-long grazing during the growing season. Each treatment was implemented on a set of 10, 130-ha pastures paired by soils, topography, and plant communities to evaluate how CARM affects vegetation (composition and production), livestock production (steer weight gain), and wildlife habitat (vegetation structure for grassland birds). For the first 5 years of the experiment, CARM cattle were managed as a single herd using AMP grazing with planned year-long rest in 20% of the pastures. Relative to TRM, CARM enhanced heterogeneity in vegetation structure across the landscape, benefiting two grassland bird species. However, this came at the cost of 12%-16% lower steer weight gains in CARM versus TRM and declining populations of a third bird species of conservation concern in both treatments. Here we discuss how increased understanding of ecological and social processes during the experiment's first 5 years led to changes in the CARM treatment and management objectives during the next 5 years. We also discuss how innovations in remote sensing, environmental sensors, ecosystem modeling, social learning, and economic analyses are being integrated into and supported by the CARM experiment.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jeq2.20599 | DOI Listing |
Front Vet Sci
August 2025
Department of Animal Science, West River Research and Extension Center, South Dakota State University, Rapid City, SD, United States.
Dry matter intake (DMI) of grazing animals varies depending on environmental factors and the physiological stage of production. The amount of CH eructated (a greenhouse gas, GHG) by ruminants is correlated with DMI and is affected by feedstuff type, being generally greater for forage diets compared to concentrates. Currently, there are limited data on the relationship between DMI and GHG in extensive rangeland systems, as it is challenging to obtain.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRisk Anal
September 2025
Integrated Sustainability Centre, Institute for Global Environmental Strategies, Hayama, Kanagawa, Japan.
Forest fires are integral to forest ecosystems as they influence nutrient cycling, plant regeneration, tree density, and biodiversity. However, human-induced climate change and activities have made forest fires more frequent, more intense, and more widespread, exacerbating their ecological and socioeconomic impact. Forest fires shape Tamil Nadu's diverse forest ecosystems, yet rising anthropogenic pressure and a warmer, drier climate have increased both their frequency and severity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiology (Basel)
August 2025
School for Environment and Sustainability, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI 48109, USA.
Mediterranean ecosystems have been grazed by livestock for thousands of years. While considered both a major anthropogenic stressor and a potential habitat conservation tool, the effects of livestock grazing on vertebrate populations remain poorly understood. Our study focused on goat and sheep grazing on a large island off the coast of Greece in order to shed light on (1) the nature of the relationship between livestock grazing and vertebrate assemblages, and (2) the mediating mechanisms.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Total Environ
August 2025
Estación Experimental Agraria Santa Ana, Dirección De Servicios Estratégicos Agrarios, Instituto Nacional de Innovación Agraria (INIA), Carretera Saños Grande - Hualahoyo Km 8 Santa Ana, Huancayo, Junín 12006, Peru.
The Junín Lake basin, a critical high-altitude ecosystem in the central Peruvian Andes, faces severe contamination from potentially toxic elements (PTEs) driven by mining activities, agriculture, and urbanization. This study evaluates the spatial distribution, ecological risk, and human health implications of 14 heavy metals, metalloids, and trace elements in surface soils surrounding the lake. Using 211 soil samples, we integrated remote sensing, land cover classification, and Random Forest machine learning models with spectral, edaphic, topographic, and proximity-based environmental covariates to predict contamination patterns and assess risk.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFScience
August 2025
Department of Zoology and Physiology, University of Wyoming, Laramie, WY, USA.
Although momentum is building to restore bison across North America, most efforts focus on small, managed herds, leaving unclear how large, migrating herds shape landscapes and whether their effects enhance or degrade ecosystems. We assessed carbon and nitrogen dynamics across the northern Yellowstone ecosystem, where one of the last remaining large migratory populations resides. Bison stabilized net aboveground production while accelerating nitrogen turnover, increasing aboveground nitrogen pools while carbon pools remained stable, which improved landscape nutritional quality.
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