Pulse Brain · Growing Health Evidence Index
Tier 3 — Observational / field trialPeer-reviewed

Grazing management, forage production and soil carbon dynamics

Byrnes R C, Eastburn D J, Tate K W, Roche L M

Renewable Agriculture and Food Systems · 2018

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Summary

This paper investigates the interconnections between grazing management practices, forage production capacity, and soil carbon dynamics in pasture systems. The authors examine whether intensive or strategic grazing approaches can simultaneously maintain or improve forage yields whilst building soil carbon stocks. The work contributes to understanding whether grazing can function as a carbon-beneficial land management strategy without compromising pastoral productivity.

UK applicability

Findings are directly relevant to UK grassland and livestock farming, particularly given policy interest in carbon sequestration through land management and subsidy schemes rewarding soil health. Applicability depends on climatic and soil similarities between the study location and UK regions, though grazing management principles are broadly transferable.

Key measures

Forage production (yield), soil carbon content or sequestration rates, grazing management intensity metrics (stocking rate, rotation frequency)

Outcomes reported

The study examined relationships between grazing management intensity, forage production, and soil carbon accumulation or depletion. It likely assessed how different stocking rates and grazing rotations influence both productivity and soil health outcomes.

Theme
Farming systems, soils & land use
Subject
Grazing ecology and soil carbon dynamics
Study type
Research
Study design
Field trial
Source type
Peer-reviewed study
Status
Published
Geography
USA
System type
Pasture-based livestock
DOI
10.1017/S1742170517000588
Catalogue ID
CGmo9yrggm-rbkinl

Topic tags

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