Variable effects of long‐term livestock grazing across the western United States suggest diverse approaches are needed to meet global change challenges

Author:

Copeland Stella M.1ORCID,Hoover David L.2,Augustine David J.2,Bates Jonathan D.1,Boyd Chad S.1,Davies Kirk W.1,Derner Justin D.3,Duniway Michael C.4,Porensky Lauren M.2,Vermeire Lance T.5

Affiliation:

1. USDA‐Agricultural Research Service Eastern Oregon Agricultural Research Center Burns Oregon USA

2. USDA‐Agricultural Research Service Rangeland Resources and Systems Research Unit Fort Collins Colorado USA

3. USDA‐Agricultural Research Service Rangeland Resources and Systems Research Unit Fort Collins, CO Cheyenne Wyoming USA

4. US Geological Survey Southwest Biological Science Center Moab Utah USA

5. USDA‐Agricultural Research Service Fort Keogh Livestock and Range Research Laboratory Miles City Montana USA

Abstract

AbstractAimsLivestock production is the most widespread land use globally and occurs across a diverse set of ecosystems. Variability in long‐term livestock grazing impacts across ecosystems is poorly characterized, particularly at larger spatial scales, despite strong relationships with various ecosystem services related to soil fertility and stabilization and vegetation productivity. Here we examine the effects of grazing on vegetation and the implications for resistance and resilience to global change.MethodsWe use six long‐term research stations in the western United States, spanning two ecoregions, multiple ecosystems, and 311 total site‐years of research. Across these sites we evaluate convergence and divergence of vegetation response to grazing vs grazing removal, focusing on interactions with drivers of global change.ResultsWe found that at long time scales (multiple decades), grazing has numerous convergent and divergent effects across ecoregions and ecosystems. Similarity among precipitation patterns and plant traits linked to grazing and production timing were key elements explaining convergence or divergence in long‐term patterns of livestock grazing response. Ecosystem differences across western US rangelands are also associated with variable effects of grazing on resistance and resilience to invasive species and climate change.ConclusionsThese results suggest that unique ecosystem or ecoregion responses to future global change may result from complex interactions between grazing and environmental factors, such as precipitation timing and plant traits. Adapting livestock and grazing management to specific ecosystem vegetation and climate variability is needed to manage for the myriad global changes affecting rangeland production and diversity.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Nature and Landscape Conservation,Ecology

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