Abstract

In the Desert Grassland, second and subsequent defoliations on perennial grasses during the active growing season can have substantial impacts on grass recovery and reproduction following herbivory. Land managers implement tactics to avoid multiple defoliations on plants by way of rotational grazing, reduced stocking rates, and/or reduced time spent within a given pasture. We explored frequency and rate of defoliation by cattle on perennial bunchgrasses within an 11-day grazing period in three pastures including distance to water (300 and 600 m) and plant height to determine their influence on animal diet selection. Results indicate that 32% of all marked plants were defoliated by cattle and only 5% of defoliated plants were defoliated a second time by day 10 of the grazing period. Defoliation patterns in the studied pastures did not differ between two distances from water, or in relation to plant height. However, at the second defoliation cattle grazed plants that were shorter than at the first defoliation suggesting a selection for high quality re-growth over larger forage on offer. The results of this study show that a 10-day grazing period during the growing season of the Desert Grassland is an effective strategy to avoid second defoliations on individual perennial grass plants while maintaining sufficient forage for use during the dormant winter grazing season.

Highlights

  • Avoiding a second defoliation on individual perennial grasses by livestock during the short 6–8-week growing season of the Desert Grassland has substantial benefits for sustaining and maintaining the condition of the available forage resource for future use [1,2,3]

  • The cessation of grazing on day 11 will leave the majority of available perennial grass plants undefoliated and, unsurprisingly, these findings are very similar to previous work [7,8,9, 11, 37]

  • A benefit of foregoing more use of summer growing season biomass is that the remaining biomass is available for grazing as dormant winter season forage, during which plants are less susceptible to declines in vigor

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Summary

Introduction

Avoiding a second defoliation on individual perennial grasses by livestock during the short 6–8-week growing season of the Desert Grassland has substantial benefits for sustaining and maintaining the condition of the available forage resource for future use [1,2,3]. This type of management places limits on livestock production by forgoing the opportunity to graze high-quality summer biomass and the high-quality regrowth of defoliated plants [4, 5]. The time between first and second defoliations is a function of the rate

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