Adaptive Grazing Management in Semiarid Rangelands: An Outcome-Driven Focus

On the Ground • Adaptive management should explicitly involve stakeholders, emphasize multiple iterations of identifying and prioritizing outcomes, and tightly link science-informed monitoring to decision-making benchmarks for effective feedback loops. • Short-term monitoring procedures should be simple, quick, and based on consistent methods that are focused on locations where meaningful change is expected or uncertainty is high. • Long-term monitoring procedures should emphasize consistent methodology across years that provides broader ecosystem context for multiple ecosystem services (e.g., watershed protection and grassland bird habitat). • Incorporating timely feedback from monitoring improves the capacity for rapid decision-making when benchmarks are attained and management should be modified.

[1]  Tony J. Svejcar,et al.  Managing Complex Problems in Rangeland Ecosystems , 2009 .

[2]  J. Ruhl,et al.  Judging adaptive management practices of U.S. agencies , 2016, Conservation biology : the journal of the Society for Conservation Biology.

[3]  T. Steffens,et al.  Case Study: Adaptive Grazing Management at Rancho Largo Cattle Company , 2013 .

[4]  Samuel D. Fuhlendorf,et al.  Long‐term vegetation dynamics mediated by herbivores, weather and fire in a Juniperus‐Quercus savanna , 1997 .

[5]  Frederick J. Swanson,et al.  OVERVIEW OF THE USE OF NATURAL VARIABILITY CONCEPTS IN MANAGING ECOLOGICAL SYSTEMS , 1999 .

[6]  Courtney A. Schultz,et al.  Decision‐Making Triggers in Adaptive Management , 2012, Conservation biology : the journal of the Society for Conservation Biology.

[7]  A. Bell,et al.  Temporal dimensions of reported life satisfaction in a low-income, agricultural environment , 2019, Ecology and Society.

[8]  I. Gordon,et al.  Individualistic herds: Individual variation in herbivore foraging behavior and application to rangeland management , 2010 .

[9]  David J. Augustine,et al.  Complexity fosters learning in collaborative adaptive management , 2019, Ecology and Society.

[10]  Karin Pirhofer-Walzl,et al.  Environmental monitoring: the scale and speed of implementation varies according to the degree of peoples involvement , 2010 .

[11]  C. S. Holling Adaptive Environmental Assessment and Management , 2005 .

[12]  Allan Savory,et al.  Holistic Resource Management , 1988 .

[13]  M. Brunson,et al.  Behavioral Factors in Rotational Grazing Systems , 2009 .

[14]  Hsiao‐Hsuan Wang,et al.  Modeling rangelands as spatially-explicit complex adaptive systems. , 2020, Journal of environmental management.

[15]  John B. Wright,et al.  Ecological services to and from rangelands of the United States , 2007 .

[16]  Jeffrey E. Herrick,et al.  A holistic strategy for adaptive land management , 2012, Journal of Soil and Water Conservation.

[17]  Lauren M. Porensky,et al.  Can Collaborative Adaptive Management Improve Cattle Production in Multipaddock Grazing Systems?☆ , 2021, Rangeland Ecology and Management.

[18]  Eve McDonald-Madden,et al.  Effective conservation planning requires learning and adaptation , 2010 .

[19]  O. Ramírez,et al.  Economics of Flexible Versus Conservative Stocking Strategies to Manage Climate Variability Risk , 2010 .

[20]  Lauren M. Porensky,et al.  Collaborative Adaptive Rangeland Management Fosters Management-Science Partnerships☆, ☆☆ , 2017, Rangeland Ecology and Management.

[21]  B. Budd,et al.  Benefits of Managed Grazing: A Manager's Perspective , 2009 .