Rangeland Drought Resilience Study
Megan Van Emon, Extension Beef Cattle Specialist
Although the majority of the state has had ample rain this year, it’s good to be prepared when a drought does occur. Drought preparedness is especially crucial when multi-year droughts occur. I am currently working with several scientists on a drought resilience study: Identifying mechanisms of rangeland drought resilience: management strategies for sustainable ecosystem health.
Key Personnel
- Sally Koerner, Assistant Professor, University of North Carolina – Greensboro
- Lauren Porensky, Ecologist, USDA-ARS Rangeland Resources & Systems Research, Fort Collins, CO
- Kevin Wilcox, Range Ecologist, University of Wyoming
- Kim La Pierre, Senior Scientist, Smithsonian Environmental Research Center
- Kurt Reinhart, Ecologist, USDA-ARS Range and Livestock Research, Miles City, MT
- Megan Van Emon, Extension Beef Cattle Specialist/Assistant Professor, Montana State University
Long-Term Goals
- Examine resilience of rangeland function under various magnitudes of drought
- Assess the impacts of realistic grazing strategies on long-term sustainability and resilience of rangeland function, both during and after extreme droughts
- Provide relevant information and tools to land managers to optimize management strategies focused on long-term forage quantity and quality after extreme droughts
Supporting Objectives
- Identify drought-driven “tipping points”, where forage quantity and quality suffer disproportionately large declines
- Quantify drought impacts on plant community structure and soil properties
- Explore the direct and indirect mechanisms controlling forage quality and quantity responses to drought
- Assess rancher philosophies concerning grazing during and after multi-year droughts
- Examine how realistic grazing strategies during/after drought effect plant community structure, soil abiotic and biotic properties, and forage quality and quantity
- Promote stakeholder implementation of research findings through producer-based meetings, extension bulletins, local field days, and non-traditional web-based learning as well as the development of an online management tool
Research Sites
- Fort Keogh Livestock and Range Research Laboratory, Miles City, MT
- Thunder Basin National Grassland, Northeastern WY
Key Activities
- Drought manipulation – Assess ecosystem response to differing drought intensities
- Rainfall reduction gradient – 5 levels
- Open for discussion
- Rainfall reduction will be based on the current year’s precipitation
- Rainout shelters will be in place from April to September
- Measure impact of reduction of spring moisture on mixed-grass prairie ecosystem
- Rainfall reduction gradient – 5 levels
- Grazing manipulation – Evaluate differing grazing rest rotations during drought on
the ecosystem
- Grazing rotations – 3 levels – We want your input
- Example: graze annually (control), do not graze in year two of drought, do not graze in year one of recovery
- Graze to moderate level
- Open for discussion
- Timing of grazing
- Open for discussion
- Field sampling – pre-drought, during drought, and during recovery
- Forage quality and quantity
- Soil abiotic factors
- Soil microbial makeup
- Plant species makeup
- Management response to drought assessment
- Assess rancher grazing strategies during and after a multi-year drought
- Evaluate drought management tools used, drought management strategies, production information, preparedness for multi-year drought
- Field days and meetings at each research site for demonstrations and assessment of the project
- Stakeholder implementation of research findings
- Provide research findings to develop new and update existing grazing strategies during multi-year droughts
- Conduct producer-based meetings to evaluate project progress and discuss current results
- Develop a web-based tool for aiding in drought management strategy development
- Grazing rotations – 3 levels – We want your input