|
 Prescribed grazing
with sheep is an inexpensive and effective way to control leafy spurge compared
to applying herbicides and replanting pastures, according to new ARS research.
Click the image for more information about it. |
|

|
Springtime Sheep Grazing Helps Control Leafy
Spurge
By Don
Comis September 29, 2009
Using sheep to control leafy spurge works best if it's done in the
spring every year, according to an Agricultural Research Service (ARS) study.
After a few years of sheep grazing during spring, desirable forage
grasses gain the upper hand as leafy spurge declines. Compared to applying
herbicides and replanting pastures, prescribed grazing with sheep is
inexpensive, according to researchers at the ARS
Fort
Keogh Livestock and Range Research Laboratory in Miles City, Mont., and
cooperators.
Rangeland ecologist
Matt
Rinella at Fort Keogh, along with graduate student Ben Hileman from
Montana State University, found that even
a little grazing in the spring for a few years can trigger positive plant
community changes in leafy spurge-infested areas. The researchers used clipping
treatments that mimicked light sheep grazing. They did this so they could
control all variables and isolate the effects of the seasonal timing of
grazing.
A possible reason light spring grazing is so devastating to leafy
spurge--and maybe to other non-grassy weeds--is that the defoliation stress
triggers tannin production at the expense of plant growth. Tannins often repel
grazers, so there is a selective advantage to this kind of response, but an
extensive loss of foliage is too much of a detrimental offset. In the first
year of being grazed, the spurge plants use carbohydrates stored in the roots,
but these become depleted, and the carbohydrates devoted to tannins are not
available for new growth.
Of course, the desirable grasses are eaten as well. But grasses,
unlike broadleaf plants such as spurge, are less appetizing to sheep because
grasses accumulate silica, and silica uptake and storage probably take less
energy than tannin production.
This research was reported recently in the Journal of
Applied Ecology.
In combination with sheep grazing and other non-chemical strategies,
beneficial insects form the centerpiece of ARS' leafy spurge control program
nationally.
ARS is the principal intramural scientific research agency of the
U.S. Department of
Agriculture.