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Effects of moderate drought on forage quality and quantity lasted for 3 years post drought and were exacerbated by heavy grazing
Author
Porensky, LM
Koerner, SE
Williams, AR
Van Emon, ML
Komatsu, KJ
Wilcox, KR
Dietrich, JD
Reinhart, KO
Publisher
XII International Rangeland Congress
Publication Year
2025
Body

Growing season droughts can have major impacts on grassland vegetation and are predicted to become increasingly frequent in temperate rangelands due to climate change. To sustain livestock production systems, we need to understand what grazing management strategies will best support long-term ecosystem and livelihood sustainability in the face of increasing drought. Little is known about how droughts interact with grazing management to affect forage quality and quantity. In two North American grasslands where grazing by domestic livestock is the primary land-use, we assessed the separate and combined effects of experimental rainfall reductions and grazing management strategies on forage quality and quantity over five years. During a 2-yr experimental rainfall reduction period, rainfall reductions decreased both forage quality and quantity at one site. At a second site, heavy grazing during the first year of experimental drought reduced forage biomass and digestibility during the second year. In the first year after experimental rainfall reduction treatments ended, plots that formerly received large rainfall reductions displayed strong legacy effects. These plots had 26% to 57% less digestible forage biomass but greater forage quality than controls. Experimental treatments did not induce long-term changes in forage quantity at either site, but reductions in forage quality persisted up to three years after droughts ended. Our results highlight the resilience of North American Great Plains grasslands to both drought and grazing, but also suggest that these disturbances can have additive and long-term effects on forage nutritive value. Legacy effects of droughts on forage quality and quantity may impact ruminant nutrition for 1-3 years following a drought, and heavy grazing during drought may strengthen the effects of drought on livestock nutrition.

Language
English
Resource Type
Text
Document Type
Conference Proceedings
Additional Information
This paper is part of the larger XII International Rangelands Congress Proceedings. Page Numbers: 1698-1703. Theme: Theme 6 / Integrated livestock management with crops and trees
ISSN
978-0-646-72121-7
Conference Name
International Rangeland Congress
Collection
International Rangelands Congress
Keywords
climate change
digestibility
drought
rain-out shelters
ungulate