As a result of the Mexican revolution private ownership of land was limited to the amount of acreage to graze 500 heads. In the north east M�xico, about 30 acres of land are needed to maintain an animal and largest cattle ranch should be no more than 6,000 hectares. Increasing the ranch carrying capacity by managing brush and establishing buffelgrass pastures was every rancher's dream in the 1970's and 1980's. Most of those fields are back to brush because ranchers have no resources to maintain buffelgrass pastures and there is no government support for that. Back in those days, wildlife was a problem, hunting was done mostly by friends, that had the privilege to own a rifle, and those were doing a favor to ranch owners by controlling the wildlife that consumed the forage for cattle. By the mid 1980's sport hunters were more common, and the need of a suitable habitat stopped ranchers to establish more buffelgrass and provided ranchers with the opportunity to harvest the wildlife complementing the ranch income with no much more effort. Tamaulipas brush country started to grow again and hunting is classified as a farm activity. These bring more government support programs and less tax. We at ANGADI, have been working on bringing in new technology to the ranchers for the last 28 years; but we are still far to accomplish our objectives. We have worked to create, and change the laws to be adequate for the new way to do ranching; with government officers to make them understand wildlife can be harvested to make money out of it, to keep ranches operational with the media showing violence in Mexico; permanent educational programs for ranchers to become more professional, business orientated. The new goal is planned grazing to promote better quality native grasses, and create a carbon credit market.
Oral presentation and poster titles, abstracts, and authors from the Society for Range Management (SRM) Annual Meetings and Tradeshows, from 2013 forward.