Conservation Grazing in Iowa

I got the chance to spend a couple days in Iowa last week, talking about conservation grazing with staff of the Iowa Department of Natural Resources.  They invited me to join a two day workshop discussing various ways to use grazing for conservation objectives.  My main role was to kick off the meeting by providing various examples of objectives that can be addressed through grazing.  Beyond that, I was asked to participate in the remainder of the workshop and contribute thoughts and ideas as appropriate.  I am grateful to have had the opportunity to participate, and came away with a better appreciation for the challenges faced by Iowa prairie managers.

Staff of the Iowa Department of Natural Resources discuss conservation grazing at the Kellerton Wildlife Management Area in south-central Iowa.

Staff of the Iowa Department of Natural Resources discuss conservation grazing at the Kellerton Wildlife Management Area in south-central Iowa.

I thought I’d share some of what I covered in my presentation.  Essentially, I focused on two broad categories of prairie management objectives that can be addressed through cattle grazing.  Those are:

  1. Reducing grass dominance to increase plant diversity
  2. Increasing heterogeneity of habitat

Reducing Grass Dominance

Dominant grass species can sometimes suppress prairie plant diversity by monopolizing soil and light resources.  Two categories of prairies seem particularly vulnerable to this: 1) prairies that have been degraded by chronic overgrazing or broadcast herbicide use, and 2) restored (reconstructed) prairies.  In Nebraska and Iowa, dominant grasses can include non-native invasive species such as smooth brome (Bromus inermis), Kentucky bluegrass (Poa pratensis), tall fescue (Schedonorus arundinaceus), and reed canarygrass (Phalaris arundinacea), as well as native species such as big bluestem (Andropogon gerardii).

When attempting to reduce the dominance of these grasses, it’s important to be clear about what you’re trying to accomplish.  If the ultimate goal is to increase plant diversity, it’s not enough to just suppress the vigor of grasses.  In order to be successful, a variety of other plant species have to colonize territory abandoned by that weakened grass.  A late-spring prescribed fire can temporarily suppress the growth and vigor of smooth brome or Kentucky bluegrass, but often results in robust growth of big bluestem later that season.  Trading a dominant invasive grass for an aggressive native grass may not be success if wildflower diversity remains low.

Grazing can play an important role in increasing plant diversity by repeatedly defoliating  major grass species that limit plant diversity.  The timing, stocking rate, and frequency of grazing can all be adjusted based on the grass species and objectives at a particular site.  As an example, we sometimes combine an early spring prescribed fire with intensive grazing (through about June 1) to suppress cool-season invasive grasses such as smooth brome and Kentucky bluegrass.  If big bluestem is abundant in the same place, we’ll leave cattle in for much of the summer as well, but at a lower stocking rate.  The strategy is to suppress both the invasive cool-season grasses and the native warm-season big bluestem while allowing other plants to thrive and expand their footprint.

At low stocking rates, cattle tend to keep big bluestem closely cropped, but don’t target most wildflower species.  We usually see an abundance of new plants growing in and amongst the weakened brome, bluegrass, and bluestem during the year of grazing and the following year.  Those new plants include both short-lived “opportunistic” plants and longer-lived perennial plants.  The result is a bump in plant diversity.  If we repeat the same kind of treatment every few years, we can often maintain a richer plant community than we can with other management options such as fire or mowing alone.

The rattlesnake master plant (Eryngium yuccifolium) in the foreground of this photo was ungrazed, in  spite of being the burned patch of this patch-burn grazed prairie.  A light stocking rate meant that even this often-favored plant was being rarely grazed in this Iowa DNR prairie.  Staff were hoping to reduce the dominance of tall fescue and allow species such as rattlesnake master to increase in abundance.

The rattlesnake master plant (Eryngium yuccifolium) in the foreground of this photo was ungrazed, in spite of being the burned patch of this patch-burn grazed prairie at Kellerton WMA.  A light stocking rate meant that even this often-favored plant escaped grazing in this Iowa DNR prairie. Staff were hoping to reduce the dominance of tall fescue and allow species such as rattlesnake master to increase in abundance.

There are countless ways to employ cattle grazing to weaken dominant plants and stimulate higher plant diversity.  I’ve written about other examples previously.  You can find a couple of those here and here.

Increasing Habitat Heterogeneity

Cattle grazing can create habitat structure that other management options such as fire and mowing can’t.  As they work to meet their nutritional needs, cattle graze some plant species (mostly their favorite grasses) preferentially.  Stocking rate, or the intensity of grazing, correlates with grazing selectivity.  At low stocking rates, cattle are free to eat only what they really want, resulting in closely cropped patches of grass interspersed with taller clumps of less palatable grasses and wildflowers.  When stocking rates are higher, cattle are forced to eat a wider range of plant species, creating a more uniformly short vegetation structure.  Both the “lower-stocking-rate-patchy-habitat” and “higher-stocking-rate-uniformly-short-habitat” can be valuable to wildlife and invertebrate species.

The ideal situation is to provide the widest possible range of habitat types within a prairie, or within a series of adjacent or connected prairies.  That way, regardless of their habitat needs, most wildlife and invertebrate species will be able to find a place to live.  Changing the location of each of those various habitat types from year to year helps keep any species (plant or animal) from becoming so abundant that it impacts other species to the point of reducing diversity.

Because of the unique vegetation structure created by grazing, a wider range of habitat types can be created with grazing than with either fire or mowing.  However, it’s also very important to ensure that grazing doesn’t have a detrimental impact on plant diversity in the name of creating wildlife habitat.  Significant periods of rest from grazing and careful monitoring of grazing impacts and populations of sensitive plant species are important.  If conservation is the primary goal, grazing should be used only when there are specific objectives to meet, not as a default strategy.

This seeded prairie has been part of a grazing system in every year since it was planted in 2003, and has maintained an excellent diversity of prairie plants.  Examples in the foreground include leadplant (Amorpha canescens).

This seeded prairie has been part of a grazing system in every year since it was planted in 2003, and has maintained an excellent diversity of prairie plants. Examples in the foreground include leadplant and Ohio spiderwort (blooming) but many others, including rare and conservative species, were abundant as well.

I’ve written much more on the topic of creating heterogeneous habitat with grazing in previous posts as well, and you can find a couple examples here and here.

Setting Useful Objectives – And Then Using Them

Regardless of the management tool(s) being employed, the biggest challenge for a prairie manager is to set clear objectives and then follow up on them.  Start by defining the outcome you want (different habitat structure, more plant diversity, etc.) and then describe precisely what success looks like.  Monitoring doesn’t have to mean spending hours on your knees with a plot frame, it just means measuring the outcome you desired.

For example, if you want more habitat diversity, you could start by listing the types of habitat structure you want (tall/dense, short sparse, patchy forbs with short grass, etc.) and how much of the prairie you’d like to be in each category.  Then, you could make a rough map of how the site looks before the treatment and estimate percentages of each habitat type.  After your grazing, fire, or mowing treatment, make another map and see if you reached your objective.

If plant diversity is important, decide how you will measure that.  This is where a plot frame and repeated sampling across a prairie can be helpful, but there are simpler ways as well.  You could pick out 3-5 small areas (less than 10 square meters) that you can find each year and then annually list the plant species you find in each area to see if that number changes over time.  You don’t have to identify all the species, just list how many there are.  If you are using grazing, it’s also important to figure out which plant species are favorites of the cattle and use that information to ensure that your management allows those plants enough rest from grazing that they can bloom and make seed every few years.

Most importantly, your objectives should drive the adjustments you make to management from day to day and season to season.  If you can define what you want, you can see if your management is moving you in the right direction.   It’s fine to change objectives as you learn, or as conditions change.  In fact, in our Platte River Prairies, while we have some broad objectives (plant and habitat diversity), we set new specific objectives and management strategies each year to respond to what we’re seeing on the ground.

Cattle grazing is just another tool that can be used for the conservation of prairies.  It’s not appropriate for all prairies or situations, but can help meet some objectives in ways that other tools (fire, mowing, herbicides) can’t.  Conservation grazing differs from ranching in that income doesn’t have to be a major part of the decision-making process each year.  On land where conservation is the primary objective, managers can decide when and how to employ grazing (or not) based purely on the conservation challenges they face.

Thanks again to the Iowa Department of Natural Resources for inviting me to their conservation grazing discussion last week.  I was impressed by the thoughtfulness and creativity of the staff I met, and I look forward to hearing more about their prairie management and restoration work down the road.

 

 

 

 

 

2014 Woodland Burning at the Rulo Bluffs Preserve

I made a trip down to our Rulo Bluffs Preserve last week.  I wanted to get down and see the results of the prescribed fire we conducted earlier this spring.  We’re in a restoration mode at the site, trying to re-open the woodland and increase the amount of light hitting the ground.  The day we burned the site this spring, the relative humidity was very low, so the fire was a little hotter and burned a higher percentage of the unit than we’d seen  in previous burns.  Killing small trees and brush with a nice hot fire was good for our objective.  On the other hand, I worried a little that we might have cooked some of the bigger trees we wanted to keep.

Another panorama showing burned and unburned.  This time, the burned area is to the left and the unburned to the right.

A panorama (four photos merged together) along the edge of the burn unit. The area burned this spring is to the left and the unburned is to the right.

Overall, I was very pleased with what I saw last week.  The fire, combined with some recent “hack-and-squirt” herbicide treatments on smaller trees has done a great job of increasing the amount of light hitting the ground.  At the same time, the majority of larger trees were still alive and leafing out, maintaining a fairly complete canopy – but one that allows for mottled light to hit the ground throughout the day.  We hope to continue annual, or at least very frequent, fires for the next several years to set the woodland back on the trajectory we want.  Then we may back off on the fire frequency a little.  Eventual success will be measured by whether we see an increased abundance of wildflowers, sedges, and grasses on the woodland floor, and – more importantly – regeneration of oak trees, which is crucial for the survival of the woodland itself.

Here are some photos of this year’s spring fire, as well as what I found during my walk through the site last week.

Firebreaks for the fire were mostly created by using a power leaf blower to clear out a narrow trail.  Nelson Winkel is shown here making a final pass around the breaks of the 100 acre burn unit.

Firebreaks for the fire were mostly created by using a power leaf blower to clear out a narrow trail. Nelson Winkel is shown here making a final pass around the breaks of the 100 acre burn unit.  Other members of the crew followed behind, raking out any other debris that needed to be cleared from the breaks.

.

Anne Stine lights down a slope during the fire.

Anne Stine lights down a slope during the fire.

.

The fire burned a little more intensively than most woodland burns we've done at the site, but nothing like a prairie fire - though it burned pretty hot up some of the steeper draws, where leaf litter had accumulated and slopes helped drive the fire.

The fire burned a little more intensively than most woodland burns we’ve done at the site, but nothing like a prairie fire – though it got pretty hot  as it went up some of the steeper draws where leaf litter had accumulated and slopes helped drive the fire.  Crew members patrolled the narrow breaks constantly during the burn, checking the fire, raking leaves and sticks in, and looking for dead trees burning along the edge of the unit that might need to be taken down.

.

This multi-photo panorama shows the largest of the prairies at Rulo Bluffs, along with some of the woodland.  The photo(s) were taken from our neighbor's pasture.

This stitched multi-photo panorama shows the largest of the prairies at Rulo Bluffs, along with some of the woodland. The photo(s) were taken from our neighbor’s pasture during the fire.

.

This area

This area burned fairly completely but there were still small unburned patches here and there.

.

We were able to use ATVs to access some portions of the firebreaks, but others were too steep and/or narrow, and were accessible only on foot.

We were able to use ATVs to access some portions of the firebreaks, but others were too steep and/or narrow, and were accessible only on foot.

.

This panorama shows approximately the same area as Anne is shown lighting above.  The right half of the photo was burned, the left was not.  Note how much more open the burned area is.

This panorama shows approximately the same area as Anne was lighting in the earlier photo. The right half of this image was burned, the left was not. Note how much more open the burned area is.

.

Burned on the left, unburned on the right.

Burned on the left, unburned on the right.  Wood nettles seem to be having a banner year in both burned and unburned areas.  I’m not sure why that is.

.

More wood nettles (and other plants) - this time on a southeast-facing slope that burned pretty hot.  Note the dead (or at least top-killed) small diameter trees.

More wood nettles (and other plants) – this time on a southeast-facing slope that burned pretty hot. Note the dead (or at least top-killed) small diameter trees.

.

Wood nettles were most abundant on lower slopes.  Higher up, mayapples, sanicle, and other plants were more common.  Here, mayapples grow with little company.  That will change as the plant community adjusts to an environment with more light availability.

Wood nettles were most abundant on lower slopes. Higher up, mayapples, sanicle, and other plants were more common. Here, mayapples grow with little company. That will change as the plant community adjusts to an environment with more light availability.  The fire wiped out this year’s crop of garlic mustard.  Hopefully, maintaining a high fire frequency in coming years will help suppress that invader.

.

Here is a south-facing wooded slope that has a lot of bare ground.  Again, this will change over time.  Here, many of the small trees were dead prior to the fire (from the hack-and-squirt treatment.

Here is a south-facing wooded slope with a lot of bare ground. Again, this will change over time as light-loving plants colonize and spread. Here, many of the small trees were dead prior to the fire (from the hack-and-squirt treatment.

.

Columbine was blooming on north-facing slopes - mainly in places the fire skipped.

Columbine was blooming on north-facing slopes – mainly in places the fire skipped.

.

A close-up of columbine.

A close-up of columbine.

.

Yellow ladies slipper orchids seemed to weather the fire just fine.  Of four populations we marked with GPS last year, I found all four and three of them were blooming.  All had been in areas that burned.

Yellow ladies slipper orchids seemed to weather the fire just fine. I found all four of the plants we marked with GPS last year, and three of them were blooming. All  four were in areas that burned.

.

The prairie (left) and neighbor's pasture (right) shown in the earlier photo during the fire.  the prairie greened up very nicely, and the numerous dogwoods were knocked back (temporarily).

Here is the same prairie (left) and neighbor’s pasture (right) shown in an earlier photo (during the fire). The prairie looks vibrant, and numerous dogwoods were knocked back (at least temporarily).

.

Small prairie ridges were greening up very nicely.  Most of the bur and black oaks in those  areas appeared to escape the fire with little or no injury.

The  small prairie ridges scattered across the preserve are greening up very nicely.  Most of the bur and black oaks in those areas appeared to escape the fire with little or no injury.

.

This beautiful spreading bur oak was clearly thriving - as was the prairie around it.

This beautiful spreading bur oak was clearly thriving – as were the prairie plants around it.  The top-killed shrubs will regrow, but frequent fires (and maybe some basal herbicide treatments) should keep them at bay.