Acute and growing social and legal conflict over regulation of non-point source pollution in Washington State is straining proactive efforts to improve water quality, especially as it relates to livestock management. Farmers and ranchers caught in the socio-biological conflict over water quality experience legal risk, reduced quality of life, and serious financial risk. Resolution of this conflict requires addressing the drivers of water quality from a watershed scale and application of an education and outreach method that is palatable to landowners. The state agency responsible for implementation and enforcement of the Clean Water Act has been only minimally successful in either educating landowners about pollution risks or motivating landowners to take proactive steps to reduce risk. Washington State University Extension, in partnership with the National Riparian Service Team and conservation districts, developed a water quality risk assessment outreach program to focus landowners and livestock managers on riparian and upland vegetation, the drivers of riparian function and water quality, rather than water quality monitoring data which are collected sporadically. We provided training on the relationships among site conditions, grazing practices, and water quality to help producers develop specific management changes for their own land or lands where they control grazing animals. This project targeted four regions in Washington State with known conflict over water quality and livestock. To date, the project has resulted in approximately 40% of producers initiating repeat photography to document condition change, using temporary fence to influence livestock distribution in riparian zones, and establishing a new grazing plan with shorter grazing periods and shifting timing of use for large rangeland or forest pastures with streams. Subsequent to this targeted outreach effort, we are developing additional risk assessment & mitigation educational materials in cooperation with the enforcement agency and conservation districts to promote statewide.
Oral presentation and poster titles, abstracts, and authors from the Society for Range Management (SRM) Annual Meetings and Tradeshows, from 2013 forward.