Issues of concern to people who live in the west: property rights, water rights, endangered species, livestock grazing, energy production, wilderness and western agriculture. Plus a few items on western history, western literature and the sport of rodeo... Frank DuBois served as the NM Secretary of Agriculture from 1988 to 2003. DuBois is a former legislative assistant to a U.S. Senator, a Deputy Assistant Secretary of Interior, and is the founder of the DuBois Rodeo Scholarship.
Tuesday, July 14, 2020
Ranchers say they can graze away wildfires. Environmentalists beg to differ.
Eight years ago, lightning struck a remote corner of northwest
Nevada, and started a fire that tore through canyons and ridges at a
brisk clip. Rancher Carolyn Dufurrena watched in horror as it devoured dry brush and bunchgrass. Three weeks later, after the Holloway Fire
scorched over 462,000 acres, her family, which had been ranching in
that area for four generations, had lost about 95 percent of the grass
they needed to feed their cattle and sheep. “When you have a few dry years, that grass becomes tinder,” said Dufurrena, who previously wrote about the fire for Range magazine.
She suspects that if her livestock had been allowed to eat more of it,
the fire would have slowed down. “If the cattle could get to it at the
right time of year, and really hit it, they would make it much less of
an issue.” Dufurrena is one of roughly 16,000 ranchers that raise livestock on
public lands. Even though, during the Obama administration, the amount
of grass they’re allowed to forage actually went up,
it’s been decreasing overall since the 1950s. And that, ranchers say,
has caused a huge problem. For years, they’ve asked the Bureau of Land
Management (BLM), the federal agency that regulates those lands, for
longer grazing seasons. This would open these lands up beyond the
traditional spring and summer months, for livestock to eat the leftover
grass that can be fuel for ever-nastier wildfires. Under the Trump administration, the ranchers’ pleas have been heard. Last month, BLM unveiled a proposal
for “targeted grazing” permits to chew some of that forage into fuel
breaks—strips of barren land that slow down a rampaging wildfire. The
main offender, the agency says, is an invasive species called
cheatgrass—a highly flammable annual grass that grows between native
shrubs and takes over native sagebrush ecosystems. Ranchers say it’s a long time coming, and they need more latitude to
take care of the land they use. But some ecologists say a plan to let
animals loose on 24 million acres of fragile sagebrush in Nevada’s Great
Basin will actually make things worse. In the short term, cattle may
chew away that tinder. Over time, all that added trampling will degrade
the soils, and in turn, encourage the growth of those flammable weeds—in
short, making the problem of the fires even worse...MORE
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2 comments:
Ecowackos are ecoterrorists
Fragile sagebrush? What the hell does that mean? Soil erosion is serious in dense stands of sage brush. The annual flash fuel is a result of that erosion. When sheep herds used the sagebrush in the winter and spring the annual fuel was consumed. But greater wisdom prevailed and sheep men were put out of business by government stupidity. Now the dominant fuel, which contains sharp awns in the seed head making is less desirable as cow forage dominates the landscape. Some brighter minds need to determine where sage brush is in the ecological menu of plant succession and treat it accordingly. My guess is that none know or care but all have the wisdom to manage the landscape. Ha! Ha!
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