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Improving Life through Science and Technology 
Grazing Down the Carbon: The Scientific 
Case for Grassland Restoration 
Biodiversity for a Livable Climate 
15th November 2014 
Boston 
Richard Teague, 
Texas A&M AgriLife Research, Vernon
Overview 
 Need to improve ecosystem function 
 Big problems and big opportunities 
 Testing a ranch scale hypothesis 
 Published research results 
 Conclusions 
 Importance for climate change mitigation 
 Regenerative management to mitigate 
agriculture’s Carbon footprint
Restore Ecosystem Function 
• Soil formation 
• Soil retention 
• Biodiversity 
• Primary production 
• Water cycling 
• Nutrient cycling 
• Habitat provision 
• Fresh water 
• Food, fiber 
• Water purification 
• Climate regulation 
• Temperature moderation 
• Biological control 
• Soil maintenance 
• Erosion control 
• Flood mitigation 
• Seed dispersal 
• Pollination
How sustainable is current agriculture? 
Modern agriculture has greatly increased human 
well-being and wealth 
But production of food has come at considerable 
environmental and social cost 
Negative effects include: 
 disruption of hydrological and biogeochemical processes, 
 soil erosion and impoverishment, 
 excessive water use and aquifer depletion, 
 contamination of soil and water by fertilizer and biocides, 
 air pollution from aerosols, 
 loss of pollinators 
 loss of habitat and biodiversity, and 
 increased GHG emissions
The role of forages and grazers 
In contrast, ecologically sensitive, 
regenerative management of ruminants in 
crop and grazing agriculture contributes 
positively to critical ecosystem benefits 
Conservation management measures and 
inclusion of perennial forages in cropping 
systems have been demonstrated to 
reduce negative impacts
My Goal 
Find out : 
 Why there is a discrepancy between some 
research and rancher achievements 
 What is the best that management can 
achieve to sustain: 
 livelihoods 
 delivery of ecosystem goods and services
Infiltration with Vegetation Composition 
Thurow 1991
90% of Soil 
function is 
mediated by 
microbes 
Microbes 
depend on 
plants 
So how we 
manage plants 
is critical
Indicator: Soil Temperature 
 At 70 oF, 100% of Soil moisture is used for 
growth. 
 At 100 oF, 85% of Soil moisture is lost and 
15% is used for growth. 
 At 115 oF, microbes begin to breakdown, and 
 At 140 oF they die.
Essential Ecosystem Processes 
1. Energy flow - Maximize the flow of solar energy 
through plants and soil. 
2. Water cycle - Maximize capture and cycling of water 
through plants and soil. Reduce export and import. 
3. Mineral cycle - Maximize cycling of nutrients through 
plants and soil. 
4. Community dynamics - High ecosystem biodiversity 
with more complex mixtures and combinations of 
desirable plant species leads to increased resilience 
and productivity.
Improving Rangeland Soil Health 
Improve soil microbe function by: 
• Improving plant cover 
• Perennial plants rather than annuals 
• Manage for most productive plants 
• Leave adequate plant residue 
• Minimizing bare ground - plant and litter cover 
• Grow plants for as many months each year as 
possible
Edwards Plateau Ranch 3-D View w/ GPS Locations 
1. 39% area used 
2. 41% GPS points on 9% area 
3. SR: 21 ac/cow 
4. Effective SR: 9 ac/cow
Grazing Pattern 
November to March < 10 
Days present 
10-50 
50-150 
> 150 
Water point 
Senft et al. 1985 
320 acres 
10-12 stockers
Previous research on multi-paddock grazing 
Teague et al. 2011; 2013
Many Grass farmers use MP grazing successfully 
Most conservation award winners use MP grazing
Planned multi-paddock grazing 
Animals: 
 Graze more of the whole landscape 
 Select a wider variety of plant species 
Manager can control: 
 How much is grazed 
 The period of grazing, and 
 The length and time of recovery
Landscape impact of continuous grazing 
Planned multi-paddock grazing 
Ranch road 
Existing fence 
Electric fence 
Water point
Restoration using multi-paddock grazing 
Noble Foundation, Coffey Ranch 
Degraded tallgrass prairie 
18 paddocks + water point 
Managed to improve plant species
Restoration using multi-paddock grazing 
Noble Foundation, Coffey Ranch 
Charles Griffith, Hugh Aljoe, Russell Stevens
Summary of Managing for Desired Outcomes 
 Match animal numbers to available forage 
 Spread grazing over whole ranch 
 Defoliate moderately in growing season 
 Short grazing periods 
 Adequate recovery before regrazing 
 Graze again before forage too mature 
 Adaptively change these elements according 
to changing conditions 
Teague et al. 2013
Managing proactively for best results 
% Leaf Volume 
Removed 
10% 
20% 
30% 
40% 
50% 
60% 
70% 
80% 
90% 
% Root Growth 
Stoppage 
0% 
0% 
0% 
0% 
2-4% 
50% 
78% 
100% 
100% 
Range Condition 
Excellent Good Poor
Managing high animal performance 
80 
70 
60 
50 
40 
30 
20 
10 
0 
0 5 10 15 20 25 
days of grazing in cycle 
kg gain/head for season 
Low SR 
High SR 
Barnes and Denny cited by Norton 2003 
Days of grazing before recovery
Managing high animal performance 
80 
70 
60 
50 
40 
30 
20 
10 
0 
0 50 100 150 
days of rest in cycle 
kg gain/head for season 
Barnes and Denny cited by Norton 2003 
Days of recovery in cycle
High-density grazing 
Low-density, light continuous grazing
What we need to know: 
Understanding causal mechanisms is critical to knowing 
how to manage to regenerate from a degraded situation. 
 What are the mechanisms causing degradation? 
 What management reverses degradation? 
 How good is Planned Holistic Management as a 
restoration and management tool? 
 Where does it work and not work? 
 How does it need to be managed to make it work as well 
as it can?
Equilibrium of 
soil formation 
and soil erosion 
Degradation 
Spiral 
Decreased cover, 
productivity and SOC 
Deteriorated soil 
structure 
Decreased 
infiltration and water 
holding capacity 
Decreased cover and 
SOC 
We know what 
causes this at 
the small scale 
Increased cover and 
SOC 
Enhanced infiltration 
and water holding 
capacity 
Enhanced soil 
structure 
Increased cover, 
productivity and SOC 
Regeneration 
Spiral 
How to manage 
for this at the 
ranch scale? 
Thurow 1991; Teague et al., 2011
Semi-arid Karroo region in South Africa 
Managed with Holistic Planned Grazing 
No stock for decades 
Average rainfall = 14” 
H2O, CO H 2 2O, CO2
(McNaughton, 1988; Fynn, 2008)
An Alternate Ranch Scale Hypothesis 
We tested the hypothesis that at the 
commercial ranch scale: 
Planned multi-paddock grazing, when adaptively managed 
to give best vegetation and animal performance, has the 
potential to produce superior long-term: 
1. Conservation and restoration of resources; 
2. Ecosystem goods and services; and 
3. Ranch profitability
Influence of multi-paddock grazing on 
soil and vegetation 
Jack county 
Parker county 
Cooke county
Influence of multi-paddock grazing on 
soil and vegetation 
In each county on 3 neighbouring ranches : 
Continuous graze @ ± 20 ac/AU (Best in class continuous) 
Continuous graze @ ± 10 ac/AU (Most common management) 
Planned multi-paddock @ ± 10 ac/AU (Best in class) 
Grazing treatment at least 10 years
Bare Ground 
40 
35 
30 
25 
20 
15 
10 
5 
0 
P = 0.0006 
Heavy Continuous Heavy Rotation Light Continuous 
Bare ground (%) 
a 
b 
b 
Heavy 
Multi-camp 
Teague et al. 2011
Soil Microbes 
Parameter 
Grazing Management 
Heavy 
continuous 
Light 
continuous 
Multi-paddock 
Grazing 
exclosure 
Total bacteria (g m-2) 82a 74a 78a 98a 
Total fungi (g m-2) 97b 98b 174a 105ab 
Fungi to Bacteria ratio 1.2b 1.1b 3.1a 0.7b
Importance of Fungi 
Fungi provide: 
 Access and transport nutrients 
 Extend root volume and depth 
 Exude glomalin to enhance soil C 
 Increase water and nutrient retention 
 Increase drought resistance 
 Plant growth highest with highest fungal – bacterial ratio 
Killham 1994; Leake et al. 2004; Averill et al. 2014
Penetration Resistance (compaction) 
300 
250 
200 
150 
100 
50 
0 
P = 0.0005 
Heavy Continuous Heavy Rotation Light Continuous 
Energy (Joules) 
a 
c 
b 
Heavy 
Multi-camp
Total Carbon Stock in Top 90 cm (t/ha) 
Heavy continuous 
Light continuous 
Multi-paddock 
Russ Conser SHELL pers comm 
160 
140 
120 
100 
80 
60
Soil Carbon, Nutrients and Water 
Parameter Heavy 
Continuous 
Light 
Continuous 
Multi-paddock 
Soil Organic Matter 3.1b 4.4b 4.86a 
Cation Exchange Capacity 24.6b 23.7b 27.4a 
Water holding (Gal/acre) 55,700 79,059 87,324
Tall Grasses 
3000 
2500 
2000 
1500 
1000 
500 
0 
Heavy 
Continuous 
P = 0.003 
Heavy Rotation Light Continuous 
Biomass (kg ha-1) 
b 
a 
b 
Heavy 
Multi-camp
Mid Grasses 
2500 
2000 
1500 
1000 
500 
0 
P = 0.188 a 
Heavy 
Continuous 
Heavy Rotation Light Continuous 
Biomass (kg ha-1) 
b 
ab 
Heavy 
Multi-camp
Annual Forbs 
600 
500 
400 
300 
200 
100 
0 
P = 0.014 
Heavy Continuous Heavy Rotation Light Continuous 
Biomass (kg ha-1) 
a 
b b 
Heavy 
Multi-camp
Profit Scenarios for HC or LC farms (20-year 
scenario) under a CO2 price of $6 per ton 
Initial Farm 
management 
Practice Change Economic 
Profit 
($ ha-1) 
Carbon 
Profit 
($ ha-1) 
Total 
Profit 
($ ha-1) 
Best 
Choice 
Initially 
Practicing HC 
HC unchanged -2.39 0 -2.39 
HC → MP 16.29 32.97 49.26  
HC → LC -0.31 28.77 28.46 
Initially 
Practicing LC 
LC unchanged -0.31 0 -0.31 
LC → MP 16.29 0.09 16.38  
LC → HC -2.39 -28.77 -31.16
Simulation modelling results 
 Both ecological condition and profitability increase 
with increasing number of paddocks 
 Adjusting HPG management with changing conditions 
increases ecological condition and profitability 
 Short periods of grazing with adequate recovery gave 
the greatest profit and improved ecological condition 
 Profitability is decreased if recovery is too long 
 HPG management ameliorated impact of increasing 
stocking rate in proportion to number of paddocks 
Journal of Environmental Management 2014
Summary 
Successful multi-paddocks managers use: 
 Flexible stocking to match forage availability 
 Spread grazing over whole ranch 
 Moderate grazing during growing season 
 Short graze periods 
 Allow recovery before regrazing 
 Graze again before forage too mature 
 Adaptively adjust to prevailing conditions 
 Use multiple species
Conclusions 
Appropriate regenerative grazing management: 
 Sequesters more soil carbon 
 Improves watershed function 
 Improves species composition 
 Stabilizes soil and soil fertility 
 Enhances wildlife and biodiversity 
 Improves economic returns while improving the 
resource base
Improving Pasture Soil Health 
Improve soil microbe function by: 
• Perennial plants rather than annuals 
• Manage for most productive plants 
• Leave adequate plant residue 
• Use diverse species mixes and cover crops 
• Eliminate tillage 
• Minimize bare ground 
• Use organic soil amendments 
• Reduce N-fertilizer use 
• Grow plants for maximum months each year 
Delgado et al 2011; Rodale 2014; Jones, 2014
Soil health differences due to management 
High density grazing 
Christine Jones, 2014 Multi species pasture
Importance for Ecosystem Function? 
Using regenerative cropping and grazing 
management can: 
 Build SOC levels and soil microbial functions 
 Control erosion more effectively 
 Build soil fertility 
 Reduce damaging inputs 
 Enhance watershed hydrological function 
 Increase biodiversity 
Could result in agricultural soils being a net GHG 
sink rather than a major GHG source
Importance for climate change mitigation 
Northern Great Plains carbon sinks and emissions of: 
 Light continuous grazing -0.783 tons CO2eq /ha/yr 
 With enteric methane of 0.176 tons CO2eq /ha/yr 
 Heavy continuous grazing -0.618 tons CO2eq /ha/yr 
 With enteric methane of 0.484 tons CO2eq /ha/yr 
Liebig et al., 2010 
Data from pasture and southern tallgrass prairie 
 Best pasture management sequestered 11 tons CO2eq /ha/yr 
Conant et al., 2001 
 Best multi-paddock grazing on prairie sequestered 11 tons 
CO2eq /ha/yr more than heavy continuous grazing 
Teague et al., 2011
Soil Health for climate change mitigation?
Soil Health for Climate Change Mitigation? 
EPA 2013; Lal 2003 
Current Reduce 
Ruminants
Soil Health for Climate Change Mitigation? 
25% 
Regenerative 
cropping and 
grazing 
-3.0 t C ha-1 yr-1 for 263 mil ha 
Conant et al., 2001; Teague et al., 2011 
Current Reduce 
Ruminants
Soil Health for Climate Change Mitigation? 
25% 
Regenerative 
cropping and 
grazing 
50% 
Regenerative 
cropping and 
grazing 
-3.0 t C ha-1 yr-1 for 263 mil ha 
Conant et al., 2001; Teague et al., 2011 
100% 
Regenerative 
cropping and 
grazing 
Current Reduce 
Ruminants
Importance for Climate Change Mitigation? 
Using regenerative cropping and grazing 
management to: 
 Build SOC levels and soil microbial functions 
 Control erosion more effectively 
Could result in soils being a net sink for 
agricultural GHGs rather than a major source of 
GHGs as at present.
Future Management Research……………….(1) 
Research needs to investigate: 
 How good is Holistic Planned Grazing as a 
restoration and management tool? 
 What multi-paddock management best reverses 
the causes of degradation? 
 Where does it work and not work? 
 How does it need to be managed to make it work 
as well as it can?
Future Management Research……………………..(2) 
 Include ranch-based research at scale of management 
 Use retrospective, remote sensing to evaluate 20-year 
impacts of different management at landscape scale 
 Develop and test theories to check conclusions for 
inconsistencies with evidence from other sources 
 Corroborate output of biological models with field 
results from commercial ranches under a range of 
management strategies 
 Use models to determine what combination of 
management choices yields superior results?
END

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Richard Teague - Grazing Down the Carbon: The Scientific Case for Grassland Restoration

  • 1. Improving Life through Science and Technology Grazing Down the Carbon: The Scientific Case for Grassland Restoration Biodiversity for a Livable Climate 15th November 2014 Boston Richard Teague, Texas A&M AgriLife Research, Vernon
  • 2. Overview  Need to improve ecosystem function  Big problems and big opportunities  Testing a ranch scale hypothesis  Published research results  Conclusions  Importance for climate change mitigation  Regenerative management to mitigate agriculture’s Carbon footprint
  • 3. Restore Ecosystem Function • Soil formation • Soil retention • Biodiversity • Primary production • Water cycling • Nutrient cycling • Habitat provision • Fresh water • Food, fiber • Water purification • Climate regulation • Temperature moderation • Biological control • Soil maintenance • Erosion control • Flood mitigation • Seed dispersal • Pollination
  • 4. How sustainable is current agriculture? Modern agriculture has greatly increased human well-being and wealth But production of food has come at considerable environmental and social cost Negative effects include:  disruption of hydrological and biogeochemical processes,  soil erosion and impoverishment,  excessive water use and aquifer depletion,  contamination of soil and water by fertilizer and biocides,  air pollution from aerosols,  loss of pollinators  loss of habitat and biodiversity, and  increased GHG emissions
  • 5. The role of forages and grazers In contrast, ecologically sensitive, regenerative management of ruminants in crop and grazing agriculture contributes positively to critical ecosystem benefits Conservation management measures and inclusion of perennial forages in cropping systems have been demonstrated to reduce negative impacts
  • 6. My Goal Find out :  Why there is a discrepancy between some research and rancher achievements  What is the best that management can achieve to sustain:  livelihoods  delivery of ecosystem goods and services
  • 7. Infiltration with Vegetation Composition Thurow 1991
  • 8. 90% of Soil function is mediated by microbes Microbes depend on plants So how we manage plants is critical
  • 9. Indicator: Soil Temperature  At 70 oF, 100% of Soil moisture is used for growth.  At 100 oF, 85% of Soil moisture is lost and 15% is used for growth.  At 115 oF, microbes begin to breakdown, and  At 140 oF they die.
  • 10. Essential Ecosystem Processes 1. Energy flow - Maximize the flow of solar energy through plants and soil. 2. Water cycle - Maximize capture and cycling of water through plants and soil. Reduce export and import. 3. Mineral cycle - Maximize cycling of nutrients through plants and soil. 4. Community dynamics - High ecosystem biodiversity with more complex mixtures and combinations of desirable plant species leads to increased resilience and productivity.
  • 11. Improving Rangeland Soil Health Improve soil microbe function by: • Improving plant cover • Perennial plants rather than annuals • Manage for most productive plants • Leave adequate plant residue • Minimizing bare ground - plant and litter cover • Grow plants for as many months each year as possible
  • 12. Edwards Plateau Ranch 3-D View w/ GPS Locations 1. 39% area used 2. 41% GPS points on 9% area 3. SR: 21 ac/cow 4. Effective SR: 9 ac/cow
  • 13. Grazing Pattern November to March < 10 Days present 10-50 50-150 > 150 Water point Senft et al. 1985 320 acres 10-12 stockers
  • 14. Previous research on multi-paddock grazing Teague et al. 2011; 2013
  • 15. Many Grass farmers use MP grazing successfully Most conservation award winners use MP grazing
  • 16. Planned multi-paddock grazing Animals:  Graze more of the whole landscape  Select a wider variety of plant species Manager can control:  How much is grazed  The period of grazing, and  The length and time of recovery
  • 17. Landscape impact of continuous grazing Planned multi-paddock grazing Ranch road Existing fence Electric fence Water point
  • 18. Restoration using multi-paddock grazing Noble Foundation, Coffey Ranch Degraded tallgrass prairie 18 paddocks + water point Managed to improve plant species
  • 19. Restoration using multi-paddock grazing Noble Foundation, Coffey Ranch Charles Griffith, Hugh Aljoe, Russell Stevens
  • 20. Summary of Managing for Desired Outcomes  Match animal numbers to available forage  Spread grazing over whole ranch  Defoliate moderately in growing season  Short grazing periods  Adequate recovery before regrazing  Graze again before forage too mature  Adaptively change these elements according to changing conditions Teague et al. 2013
  • 21. Managing proactively for best results % Leaf Volume Removed 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80% 90% % Root Growth Stoppage 0% 0% 0% 0% 2-4% 50% 78% 100% 100% Range Condition Excellent Good Poor
  • 22. Managing high animal performance 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 0 5 10 15 20 25 days of grazing in cycle kg gain/head for season Low SR High SR Barnes and Denny cited by Norton 2003 Days of grazing before recovery
  • 23. Managing high animal performance 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 0 50 100 150 days of rest in cycle kg gain/head for season Barnes and Denny cited by Norton 2003 Days of recovery in cycle
  • 24. High-density grazing Low-density, light continuous grazing
  • 25. What we need to know: Understanding causal mechanisms is critical to knowing how to manage to regenerate from a degraded situation.  What are the mechanisms causing degradation?  What management reverses degradation?  How good is Planned Holistic Management as a restoration and management tool?  Where does it work and not work?  How does it need to be managed to make it work as well as it can?
  • 26. Equilibrium of soil formation and soil erosion Degradation Spiral Decreased cover, productivity and SOC Deteriorated soil structure Decreased infiltration and water holding capacity Decreased cover and SOC We know what causes this at the small scale Increased cover and SOC Enhanced infiltration and water holding capacity Enhanced soil structure Increased cover, productivity and SOC Regeneration Spiral How to manage for this at the ranch scale? Thurow 1991; Teague et al., 2011
  • 27. Semi-arid Karroo region in South Africa Managed with Holistic Planned Grazing No stock for decades Average rainfall = 14” H2O, CO H 2 2O, CO2
  • 29. An Alternate Ranch Scale Hypothesis We tested the hypothesis that at the commercial ranch scale: Planned multi-paddock grazing, when adaptively managed to give best vegetation and animal performance, has the potential to produce superior long-term: 1. Conservation and restoration of resources; 2. Ecosystem goods and services; and 3. Ranch profitability
  • 30. Influence of multi-paddock grazing on soil and vegetation Jack county Parker county Cooke county
  • 31. Influence of multi-paddock grazing on soil and vegetation In each county on 3 neighbouring ranches : Continuous graze @ ± 20 ac/AU (Best in class continuous) Continuous graze @ ± 10 ac/AU (Most common management) Planned multi-paddock @ ± 10 ac/AU (Best in class) Grazing treatment at least 10 years
  • 32. Bare Ground 40 35 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 P = 0.0006 Heavy Continuous Heavy Rotation Light Continuous Bare ground (%) a b b Heavy Multi-camp Teague et al. 2011
  • 33. Soil Microbes Parameter Grazing Management Heavy continuous Light continuous Multi-paddock Grazing exclosure Total bacteria (g m-2) 82a 74a 78a 98a Total fungi (g m-2) 97b 98b 174a 105ab Fungi to Bacteria ratio 1.2b 1.1b 3.1a 0.7b
  • 34. Importance of Fungi Fungi provide:  Access and transport nutrients  Extend root volume and depth  Exude glomalin to enhance soil C  Increase water and nutrient retention  Increase drought resistance  Plant growth highest with highest fungal – bacterial ratio Killham 1994; Leake et al. 2004; Averill et al. 2014
  • 35. Penetration Resistance (compaction) 300 250 200 150 100 50 0 P = 0.0005 Heavy Continuous Heavy Rotation Light Continuous Energy (Joules) a c b Heavy Multi-camp
  • 36. Total Carbon Stock in Top 90 cm (t/ha) Heavy continuous Light continuous Multi-paddock Russ Conser SHELL pers comm 160 140 120 100 80 60
  • 37. Soil Carbon, Nutrients and Water Parameter Heavy Continuous Light Continuous Multi-paddock Soil Organic Matter 3.1b 4.4b 4.86a Cation Exchange Capacity 24.6b 23.7b 27.4a Water holding (Gal/acre) 55,700 79,059 87,324
  • 38. Tall Grasses 3000 2500 2000 1500 1000 500 0 Heavy Continuous P = 0.003 Heavy Rotation Light Continuous Biomass (kg ha-1) b a b Heavy Multi-camp
  • 39. Mid Grasses 2500 2000 1500 1000 500 0 P = 0.188 a Heavy Continuous Heavy Rotation Light Continuous Biomass (kg ha-1) b ab Heavy Multi-camp
  • 40. Annual Forbs 600 500 400 300 200 100 0 P = 0.014 Heavy Continuous Heavy Rotation Light Continuous Biomass (kg ha-1) a b b Heavy Multi-camp
  • 41. Profit Scenarios for HC or LC farms (20-year scenario) under a CO2 price of $6 per ton Initial Farm management Practice Change Economic Profit ($ ha-1) Carbon Profit ($ ha-1) Total Profit ($ ha-1) Best Choice Initially Practicing HC HC unchanged -2.39 0 -2.39 HC → MP 16.29 32.97 49.26  HC → LC -0.31 28.77 28.46 Initially Practicing LC LC unchanged -0.31 0 -0.31 LC → MP 16.29 0.09 16.38  LC → HC -2.39 -28.77 -31.16
  • 42. Simulation modelling results  Both ecological condition and profitability increase with increasing number of paddocks  Adjusting HPG management with changing conditions increases ecological condition and profitability  Short periods of grazing with adequate recovery gave the greatest profit and improved ecological condition  Profitability is decreased if recovery is too long  HPG management ameliorated impact of increasing stocking rate in proportion to number of paddocks Journal of Environmental Management 2014
  • 43. Summary Successful multi-paddocks managers use:  Flexible stocking to match forage availability  Spread grazing over whole ranch  Moderate grazing during growing season  Short graze periods  Allow recovery before regrazing  Graze again before forage too mature  Adaptively adjust to prevailing conditions  Use multiple species
  • 44. Conclusions Appropriate regenerative grazing management:  Sequesters more soil carbon  Improves watershed function  Improves species composition  Stabilizes soil and soil fertility  Enhances wildlife and biodiversity  Improves economic returns while improving the resource base
  • 45. Improving Pasture Soil Health Improve soil microbe function by: • Perennial plants rather than annuals • Manage for most productive plants • Leave adequate plant residue • Use diverse species mixes and cover crops • Eliminate tillage • Minimize bare ground • Use organic soil amendments • Reduce N-fertilizer use • Grow plants for maximum months each year Delgado et al 2011; Rodale 2014; Jones, 2014
  • 46. Soil health differences due to management High density grazing Christine Jones, 2014 Multi species pasture
  • 47. Importance for Ecosystem Function? Using regenerative cropping and grazing management can:  Build SOC levels and soil microbial functions  Control erosion more effectively  Build soil fertility  Reduce damaging inputs  Enhance watershed hydrological function  Increase biodiversity Could result in agricultural soils being a net GHG sink rather than a major GHG source
  • 48. Importance for climate change mitigation Northern Great Plains carbon sinks and emissions of:  Light continuous grazing -0.783 tons CO2eq /ha/yr  With enteric methane of 0.176 tons CO2eq /ha/yr  Heavy continuous grazing -0.618 tons CO2eq /ha/yr  With enteric methane of 0.484 tons CO2eq /ha/yr Liebig et al., 2010 Data from pasture and southern tallgrass prairie  Best pasture management sequestered 11 tons CO2eq /ha/yr Conant et al., 2001  Best multi-paddock grazing on prairie sequestered 11 tons CO2eq /ha/yr more than heavy continuous grazing Teague et al., 2011
  • 49. Soil Health for climate change mitigation?
  • 50. Soil Health for Climate Change Mitigation? EPA 2013; Lal 2003 Current Reduce Ruminants
  • 51. Soil Health for Climate Change Mitigation? 25% Regenerative cropping and grazing -3.0 t C ha-1 yr-1 for 263 mil ha Conant et al., 2001; Teague et al., 2011 Current Reduce Ruminants
  • 52. Soil Health for Climate Change Mitigation? 25% Regenerative cropping and grazing 50% Regenerative cropping and grazing -3.0 t C ha-1 yr-1 for 263 mil ha Conant et al., 2001; Teague et al., 2011 100% Regenerative cropping and grazing Current Reduce Ruminants
  • 53. Importance for Climate Change Mitigation? Using regenerative cropping and grazing management to:  Build SOC levels and soil microbial functions  Control erosion more effectively Could result in soils being a net sink for agricultural GHGs rather than a major source of GHGs as at present.
  • 54. Future Management Research……………….(1) Research needs to investigate:  How good is Holistic Planned Grazing as a restoration and management tool?  What multi-paddock management best reverses the causes of degradation?  Where does it work and not work?  How does it need to be managed to make it work as well as it can?
  • 55.
  • 56. Future Management Research……………………..(2)  Include ranch-based research at scale of management  Use retrospective, remote sensing to evaluate 20-year impacts of different management at landscape scale  Develop and test theories to check conclusions for inconsistencies with evidence from other sources  Corroborate output of biological models with field results from commercial ranches under a range of management strategies  Use models to determine what combination of management choices yields superior results?
  • 57. END