Dr Heidi-Jayne Hawkins, head of research at Conservation South Africa and an associate at the Department of Biological Sciences at the University of Cape Town, spoke to Roelof Bezuidenhout about research findings indicating that rotational grazing management has little effect on veld characteristics across the farm fence lines of South Africa.
HOW WAS THE STUDY CONDUCTED?
Forty-eight working livestock farms were surveyed nationally to identify farmers practising a range of livestock farming approaches, from continuous and low density, to holistic planned grazing (HPG) and ultra-high-density grazing. The farms covered more than 1 300km² across five biomes and a rainfall gradient of between 150mm/year and 850mm/ year. Having identified 23 farms with high-density grazing and fence lines with neighbours having similar fire regimes, we tested the perception that intensive grazing sustains higher animal numbers, while increasing grass cover and reducing bare ground and woody plant cover, using remotely sensed (satellite) vegetation indices and on-the-ground inspections.
The available fence lines were clustered around the transition between the Grassland and Nama Karoo biomes. An important selection criterion was that farms were managed under a particular grazing management for more than 15 years and have livestock, including cattle, sheep and/or goats where 75% of their diet comprised natural vegetation. A few farms stocked a diversity of game in very low numbers (on average 2% of total farm LSUs). Fourteen of the farms were selected as representing grazing management most strongly aligned to HPG or with very high grazing densities (highly rotational). The rationale behind this was that these farms were likely to have more extreme management differences to their neighbours, and if grazing management has any effect on vegetation, it would be most evident at these fence lines.
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