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Drought & Water
Beef/Cattle Extension Program
Grazing Management During and After Extended
"Early
planning will enable you to carefully consider
potential alternatives for your grazing plan this
summer." |
By by Dr. Jeff Mosley, Extension
Range Management Specialist, Department of Animal &
Range Sciences, Montana State University, Bozeman
To me, drought and taxes have a lot in common: they're
both facts of life that must be dealt with periodically;
they're both royal pains in the rear; and they both carry
serious consequences if we choose to ignore them.
Most ranch businesses can readily adjust to one or
two dry years in a row, and I don't believe that short-term
drought necessitates major changes to most ranch grazing
plans. However, three or more successive dry years challenge
even the best graziers, and unfortunately, many range
livestock producers across our state now face this situation.
Besides the immediate concerns about how to feed the
livestock, serious drought also stresses the land, often
to the brink of change.
Years can pass without much apparent change to seeded
pastures and rangelands, but extended drought can cause
dramatic shifts in vegetation. The land then remains
relatively unchanged until the next environmental trigger
occurs. Drought conditions over the last three or four
years have created an environmental trigger for Montana's
pastureland and rangeland, and failure to care for the
land during this year may create serious consequences
for decades to come.
Assess Drought Impact
How much of an adjustment is needed to your ranch grazing
plan for Spring and Summer 2001? The answer depends,
of course, upon how hard you've been hit by drought.
The drought has not impacted everyone to the same extent,
and even pastures or portions of pastures within one
ranch have not been affected equally. Consider these
questions to assess drought's impact:
Were weeds a problem before the drought? If
weeds were a problem before the drought, they'll probably
be even worse after drought. Drought stresses all plants,
but weeds are usually stressed less than desirable forage
plants because most weeds grow earlier in the growing
season before soil moisture is fully depleted. Also,
weeds are usually grazed less than other plants. When
rainfall does occur, weeds are in better shape to respond
and they get a jump-start on the desirable plants. Producers
need to be especially vigilant about new weed infestations
if they brought in hay from new sources this past fall
and winter. Inspect areas where the hay was fed and
plan to control new infestations this summer - before
weeds get well established and before weed control becomes
more costly.
Were poisonous plants common before the drought?
Poisonous plant problems often worsen during or after
an extended drought, especially early in the growing
season. Many poisonous plants are "weeds"
that survive drought better than desirable forage plants,
and many poisonous plants green up early in the season
(e.g., low larkspur, death camas, and locoweed). Poisonous
plant infestations tend to thicken after serious drought,
but toxicity problems can be more common after drought
even when poisonous plants don't increase in density.
One reason for increased toxicity problems is that after
a dry year there is less (if any) residual carry-over
forage from the year before to buffer the toxins. Thus,
dietary concentrations can reach toxic levels even when
livestock don't increase their consumption of poisonous
plants. A related concern for this spring is grass
tetany. Without last year's residual carry-over
grass to buffer the new green growth in the gut, grass
tetany becomes more likely and strategic supplementation
will be warranted.
When was the area grazed last year? One silver
lining about drought years is that much more of the
grazing season usually occurs after seeds ripen and
when plants are dormant. Plants are more tolerant of
grazing during these later stages of plant development,
so some plants may have endured less stress from grazing
than in normal years. The plants stressed most by last
year's drought were those grazed in early summer, because
they were unable to regrow before soil moisture was
depleted.
How heavily was the area grazed last year and in
previous years? Light or moderate grazing doesn't
harm most plants, nor does heavy (< 60% utilization)
or severe use in one year if the plants are given an
opportunity to recover. Plants are stressed when heavy
or severe use occurs for two or more years in a row.
When drought breaks, plants grazed lightly to moderately
in the past will recover from drought faster than plants
that have been heavily grazed for many years.
Do plants appear stressed this spring? Stressed
plants begin growth later and grow slower in spring,
and most plants will be stressed after three or four
drought years. Consequently, turnout in spring will
likely need to be later this year in many areas across
our state. The rooting depth of your forage plants and
the length of drought in your area can help you judge
how long plant growth will be delayed this spring. After
one or two dry years, growth usually begins earlier
in deep-rooted versus shallow-rooted plants because
deep-rooted plants had access to more soil water and
were less stressed. After an extended drought, however,
deep-rooted plants may rebound slower because they remained
green longer into the growing season and probably received
extra grazing pressure during drought.
Grazing Strategies
Early planning will enable you to carefully consider
potential alternatives for your grazing plan this summer.
Waiting to plan until June or July will leave fewer
options available. Some potential options include:
Reduce the Amount of Forage Needed
- Cull more heavily before the grazing season begins
and before the market becomes glutted. Reduce the
number of replacements, if possible. Mature cows will
survive and reproduce better than young cows or heifers
that are still growing.
- Wean calves early. Dry cows consume about 35% less
forage than lactating cows and 400-lb calves consume
about one-third as much as mature cows.
Graze Somewhere Else
- Lease additional pasture.
- Use tame pastures, especially subirrigated or irrigated
ones, more heavily than usual. The improved forage
species can tolerate heavy grazing more so than native
rangeland, so allocate more of the load to those pastures
that can tolerate it best.
- Try to graze areas this year that didn't get much
or any grazing use last year. For example, consider
areas near reservoirs and springs that went dry last
year. These areas may have been grazed less than in
a normal year when water is available. Herding, supplemental
feeding, hauling or piping water, temporary fencing
or shutting off water in over-used areas can all be
used to control where livestock graze. Be sure to
carefully evaluate the costs and benefits of these
practices versus the costs and benefits of reducing
livestock numbers.
Adjust the Timing of Grazing
- Delay turnout in spring so that forage plants can
recover vigor. Delayed turnout will also lessen problems
with poisonous plants and grass tetany.
- In rotational grazing systems, rotate more frequently.
- Consider using any rested pastures and thereby spreading
the use this year across all of your pastures.
- For early season grazing this year, try to graze
any areas that were ungrazed last year or those areas
that were grazed after plant dormancy during last
summer's drought.
- For late season grazing this year, try to use those
areas that were grazed heavily last year before plant
dormancy.
Beef:
Questions & Answers is a joint project between
MSU Extension and the Montana Beef Council. This
column informs producers about current consumer
education, promotion and research projects funded
through the $1 per head checkoff. For more information,
contact the Montana Beef Council at (406) 442-5111
or at beefcncl@mt.net
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