Soil properties in northern temperate pastures do not vary with management practices and are independent of rangeland health

Author:

Pyle Lysandra A.123,Hall Linda M.1,Bork Edward W.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Agricultural, Food and Nutritional Science, 410 Agriculture/Forestry Center, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB T6G 2P5, Canada.

2. Eastern Oregon Agricultural Research Center, United States Department of Agriculture, 67826-A Hwy. 205, Burns, OR 97720, USA.

3. Sierra Foothills Research and Extension Center, University of California Division of Agriculture and Natural Resources, 8279 Scott Forbes Road, Browns Valley, CA 95918, USA.

Abstract

Studies examining the influence of disturbance and management history on pasture soils across a large sampling area are uncommon. We report on the soil properties found in 102 northern temperate pastures sampled in central Alberta, Canada, and relate these attributes to ongoing pasture management practices compiled from producer surveys and aboveground measures of rangeland health (RH). Tame pastures, typically seeded to introduced forages, were associated with higher soil fertility (total carbon, nitrogen, and organic matter) than semi-native grasslands, which were associated with coarse-textured soils. Soil properties remained independent of most grazing and pasture management practices, including the grazing systems, class of livestock, fertilization, and stocking rate. However, manure application, often combined with harrowing, was associated with improved soil fertility and increased electrical conductivity (salinity). Soils with a fire history reported by land managers, largely in the Boreal natural region, were characterized by a greater soil C:N ratio. Soil surface properties (litter cover, litter depth, and bare soil) were responsive to grazing management, with growing season and year-round grazing associated with a thinner litter layer having less cover, and bare ground twice as high under continuous grazing compared with pastures rotationally grazed. Further, variation in soil surface cover was associated with contrasting RH classes (healthy, healthy with problems, and unhealthy), whereas soil attributes remained unrelated to RH. This study demonstrates that soils within these northern temperate grasslands are relatively insensitive to many pasture management practices, and highlights that existing RH assessments may provide limited insight into differences in mineral soil properties.

Publisher

Canadian Science Publishing

Subject

Soil Science

Reference61 articles.

1. Adams, B.W., Ehlert, G., Stone, C., Lawrence, D., Alexander, M., Willoughby, M., et al. 2005. Rangeland health assessment for grassland, forest and tame pasture. Public Lands and Forests Division, Alberta Sustainable Resource Development, Government of Alberta, Edmonton, AB, Canada.

2. Effects of annual burning on grassland in the aspen parkland of east-central Alberta

3. Effects of Season of Burning on the Microenvironment of Fescue Prairie in Central Saskatchewan

4. Nitrogen and phosphorus fertilization of rangelands affects yield, forage quality and the botanical composition

5. Regeneration of Woody Species following Burning and Grazing in Aspen Parkland

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