Wednesday, 9 November 2005
18

Factors Contributing to Grassland Implementation and Multifunctionality at Field, Farm and Community Levels in Marion County, Iowa.

Karie Wiltshire and Kathleen Delate. Departments of Agronomy and Sustainable Agriculture, Iowa State University, Ames, IA 50011

Cow-calf operations in grass-based agricultural systems in south-central Iowa are multifunctional in their provision of agronomic, ecological, economic and social uses. However, since 1992 pastureland and cow-calf operations have decreased, leading to a speculative loss of some beneficial functions. This study uses farming systems research and evaluation to investigate grassland multifunctionality at farm, field, and community levels in a south-central Iowa county. At the farm level, themes from semi-structured interviews with cow-calf operators suggest that the relevance of profit from a cow-calf operation is mediated by a wide range of livelihood and lifestyle choices, and that operators have diverse criteria regarding the suitability of land for pasture. At the field level, on-farm research investigates the feasibility of a multifunctional pasture management strategy in response to the operator's need for an organically certifiable warm-season paddock. The implementation of native grasses and legumes into fallow pasture without the use of herbicides under flash grazing, mowing, and unmanaged control treatments tests their differences in species establishment and pasture composition. After three seasons, no significant differences between grazing and mowing were evident in total seeded species establishment, but there was a trend toward greater native legume establishment in the control over the managed treatments in 2005 (P< 0.0183). Total species abundance after three seasons of management significantly differed between each treatment, with the control bearing the highest species abundance/m2 (P<0.0605). Each treatment will be evaluated in light of the forage quality and multifunctionality it offers. At the community level, results from the farm and field studies will be tied to regional demographic and economic information to evaluate how local institutions relate to and support the existing grass-based operations. Results will be shared with focus groups in a collaborative learning context.

Handout (.pdf format, 30031.0 kb)

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