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Western Ranchers’ Perspectives on Enablers and Constraints to Flood Irrigation
Author
Sketch, M.
Dayer, A.A.
Metcalf, A.L.
Publisher
Elsevier Inc.
Publication Year
2020-03
Body

Flood irrigation on western rangelands is important for diverse social and ecological reasons, providing forage for many agricultural operations and maintaining many critical wetlands across the region. However, recent debate over the efficiency of flood irrigation and resulting transition to other “more efficient” types of irrigation has put many of the working wet meadows sustained by flood irrigation at risk. As the sustainability of these landscapes is primarily dependent on ranchers’ management decisions, we sought to gain a deeper understanding of factors influencing ranchers who flood irrigate and how these factors interrelate. We applied the Community Capitals Framework to explore what considerations act as enablers and constraints to maintaining flood irrigation and to evaluate the role of each type of capital in enabling and constraining the coproduction of working wet meadows for ranchers and the environment. Our qualitative analysis of facilitated workshop transcripts and observation notes from two study areas within the Intermountain West showed that ranchers perceived constraining and enabling factors of flood irrigation related to all seven types of community capitals: natural, financial, built, cultural, human, social, and political. The irrigation methods used by ranchers were heavily influenced by environmental components of the landscape rather than reflecting a choice among alternative methods. Other prominent enablers included a commitment toward maintaining the natural history of the landscape and the ranching lifestyle. Primary constraints included the impact of public misperception and the ability to pass their operation on to the next generation. Ranchers weighed multiple considerations simultaneously in a holistic, community-scale approach to management decisions and described how diverse enablers and constraints interacted to determine the viability of flood irrigation and ranching. These results indicate rancher decisions are driven by complex social-ecological considerations and demonstrate the importance of each capital type to rangeland conservation. © 2019 The Author(s)

Language
en
Resource Type
Text
Document Type
Journal Issue/Article
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)
10.1016/j.rama.2019.12.003
Additional Information
Mary Sketch, Ashley A. Dayer, and Alexander L. Metcalf "Western Ranchers' Perspectives on Enablers and Constraints to Flood Irrigation☆," Rangeland Ecology and Management 73(2), 285-296, (11 March 2020). https://doi.org/10.1016/j.rama.2019.12.003
ISSN
1550-7424
OAI Identifier
oai:repository.arizona.edu:10150/679452
Journal Volume
73
Journal Number
2
Journal Pages
285-296
Collection
Rangeland Ecology & Management (REM)
Journal Name
Rangeland Ecology and Management
Keywords
Community Capitals
conservation
decision making
Flood Irrigation
rancher
social-ecological systems
decision making
forage
irrigation system
qualitative analysis
ranching
rangeland
sustainability
wetland
Intermountain West