Adaptive grazing, monitoring, and diversified forage strategies improve rangeland resilience and ranch viability in variable high-desert conditions.
This video features Jack Southworth, who manages a cow-calf-yearling operation near Seneca, Oregon, in a high-desert environment with a short growing season and limited precipitation. He emphasizes rangeland health as the foundation of the ranch, using adaptive grazing strategies that increase stock density for short periods while allowing long recovery times for plants. Practices such as cross-fencing, delayed grazing, and annual monitoring help maintain ground cover, reduce evaporation, and improve water infiltration. Southworth also leverages diverse forage resources, including planted pastures, native rangeland, and U.S. Forest Service grazing allotments, to match grazing timing with plant growth and environmental conditions. Managing public lands requires balancing livestock production with recreation, wildlife, and riparian health. Across these strategies, Southworth highlights resilience—ecological, economic, and social—as essential for sustaining ranch operations under highly variable climate conditions.
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Authors
Yorgey, G., Hall, S. A., Hudson, T., Reeves, M., and Neibergs, S.
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Related Project
Year Published
2020
Area of Focus
Agricultural Practices
Topics
Livestock, Natural Resources, and Production Systems
Collaborators
Funding Sources
- McIntire-Stennis
- USDA Great Plains Climate Hub




