Ruminant Livestock Species
Balancing Multiple Values
Grazing Strategies
Grazing System
Grazing Systems Continued
100

Ruminants are suited to eat low quality high fiber forage and are hardy animals that can live on arid land. 

How are production practices adapted to the Western US?

100

Water optimization, soil retention, management of disturbance, and optimization of energy cycles. 

What are ecological functions?

100

Grasses are most resistant, forbs and shrubs are intermediate, and least resistant. Graze during the growing season every third year. 

What are the general grazing rules?
100

Timing, duration, and intensity of use. 

What can you adjust with multiple pastures? 

100

When a lot of animals are put on pasture for a short amount of time. Lots of grazing in a short time span. Doesn't work well on arid rangelands. 

What are high-intensity grazing systems?
200

Quality of life, values, tradition, history, honor, dignity, and consumer values. 

What are the aspects of Social Acceptability?

200

Maintain or improve: plant species composition, quantity and quality of forage and water, and manage fuels. 

What are some NRCS guidelines?

200
Uniformly grazes the land. 

What does mixed species grazing do?

200

Pros: cheap, fewer resources needed 

Cons: leads to overuse, doesn't encourage distribution

What are the pros and cons of continuous grazing? 
200

Grazing system adapted to the landscape. Multiple non-uniform pastures. 

What is modified rotational grazing?

300
Production per cow, cost per cow per year, genetic value added, and marketing programs. 

What are the aspects of Economic Sustainability?

300

More grazing equals fewer plants due to defoliation and reduced photosynthetic capabilities. 

How do plants respond to grazing?

300

When you utilize animals to graze a specific plant/area for a desired outcome. 

What is targeted grazing?

300

Rotating animals between different pastures to avoid overgrazing. 

What is rotational grazing?
300

Importance of water, strategic use of supplements (effective at moving grazing distribution), genetic selection, and strategic use of herding. 

What are other grazing system tools?

400

Plant and animal biodiversity, forage production, aesthetic value, water, and riparian values. 

What are the aspects of Ecological Sustainability?

400
Roots are what the plant uses to get water and nutrients from the soil. Grazing reduces root mass.  

Why are roots important for plant vigor?

400

Common stragety to reduce reliance on harvest forage. Saving forage for later. 

What is stockpiling forage?

400
One pasture is rested each year, and the rest are rotated. Works well for degraded rangelands. 

What is rest rotation grazing?

400

There is no one way to graze. All dependent on animals, environment, and the amount of land. 

What is the best way to graze?

500
Multiple Use Act (1968), Federal Clean Water Act (1972), and The Endangered Species Act (1973). 

What legislation has influenced ruminant production on Western lands?

500

6CO2 + 6H2O --> C6H12O2 + 6O2

What is the equation for photosynthesis?

500

Concentrate selectors (deer and moose), Intermediate types (goats, elk, bison), and Grass/roughage eaters (sheep and cows).

What are the types of grazing animals?

500

The order of pasture use is changed each year for grazing. Works well for plants that aren't grazing-tolerant. Preferred by the USDA. 

What is deferred rotational grazing?

500

Wildlife. 

What is a common missing component in grazing?

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