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ARS Home » Plains Area » Las Cruces, New Mexico » Range Management Research » Research » Publications at this Location » Publication #368313

Research Project: Science and Technologies for the Sustainable Management of Western Rangeland Systems

Location: Range Management Research

Title: Beef production in the southwestern United States: Strategies toward sustainability

Author
item Spiegal, Sheri
item CIBILS, ANDRES - New Mexico State University
item Bestelmeyer, Brandon
item Steiner, Jean
item Estell, Richard - Rick
item Archer, David
item AUVERMANN, BRENT - Texas A&M Agrilife
item BESTELMEYER, STEPHANIE - Asombro Institute For Science Education
item BOUCHERON, LAURA - New Mexico State University
item CAO, HUIPING - New Mexico State University
item COX, ANDREW - New Mexico State University
item DEVLIN, DAN - New Mexico State University
item DUFF, GLENN - New Mexico State University
item EHLERS, KRISTY - Non ARS Employee
item Elias, Emile
item GIFFORD, CRAIG - New Mexico State University
item Gonzalez, Alfredo
item HOLLAND, JOHN - Sruc-Scotland'S Rural College
item JENNINGS, JENNY - Texas A&M Agrilife
item MARSHALL, ANN - Non ARS Employee
item MCCRACKEN, DAVY - Sruc-Scotland'S Rural College
item MCINTOSH, MATTHEW - New Mexico State University
item MILLER, RHONDA - Texas A&M University
item PAULIN, ROBERT - Non ARS Employee
item PLACE, SARA - National Cattlemen'S Beef Association (NCBA)
item REDD, MATTHEW - The Nature Conservancy
item Rotz, Clarence - Al
item TOLLE, CINDY - Non ARS Employee
item WATERHOUSE, ANTHONY - Sruc-Scotland'S Rural College

Submitted to: Frontiers in Sustainable Food Systems
Publication Type: Peer Reviewed Journal
Publication Acceptance Date: 6/25/2020
Publication Date: 8/19/2020
Citation: Spiegal, S.A., Cibils, A.F., Bestelmeyer, B.T., Steiner, J.L., Estell, R.E., Archer, D.W., Auvermann, B., Bestelmeyer, S., Boucheron, L., Cao, H., Cox, A., Devlin, D., Duff, G., Ehlers, K., Elias, E.H., Gifford, C., Gonzalez, A.L., Holland, J., Jennings, J., Marshall, A., McCracken, D., McIntosh, M., Miller, R., Paulin, R., Place, S., Redd, M., Rotz, C.A., Tolle, C., Waterhouse, A. 2020. Beef production in the southwestern United States: Strategies toward sustainability. Frontiers in Sustainable Food Systems. 4(114):1-8. https://doi.org/10.3389/fsufs.2020.00114.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.3389/fsufs.2020.00114

Interpretive Summary: From grazing lands to meat packing, beef production systems in the United States are increasingly expected to meet new global demands without compromising environmental quality. These challenges and opportunities are manifest in the American Southwest and Ogallala Aquifer region, neighboring regions connected ecologically and socially through beef production. Here we introduce a new USDA-NIFA Coordinated Agricultural Project designed to explore strategies to improve sustainability of beef production in the two regions. With a boundary-spanning approach of education, participatory research, and extension, the project is identifying tradeoffs of the three strategies with explicit attention to linkages of the two adjacent regions and full consideration of their interrelated ecological and social systems.

Technical Abstract: From grazing lands to meat packing, beef production systems in the United States are increasingly expected to meet new global demand without compromising environmental quality. These challenges and opportunities are manifest in the American Southwest and Ogallala Aquifer region, neighboring regions connected ecologically and socially through beef production. Each year most calves raised on extensive, arid Southwestern pastures are exported to the Ogallala Aquifer region for finishing on grains from the American Upper Midwest. Intensifying changes in climate, vegetation, and human demographics threaten the sustainability of the system. Heritage cattle genetics, precision ranching, and range finishing on Southwestern rangelands are three promising strategies for improving sustainability. However, major knowledge gaps exist. Desirable landscape use by Raramuri Criollo, a heritage cattle type, has been identified in several arid rangeland settings, but little is known about their performance in conventional feedyards. While precision agriculture is already prevalent in croplands, less is known about how these technologies can be cost effective in arid rangelands. Moreover, many perceive range finishing as environmentally friendly, but tradeoffs of greenhouse gases, increased rangeland use, and disruption of Ogallala Aquifer cattle feeding systems must be assessed. Here we introduce a new USDA-NIFA Coordinated Agricultural Project designed to fill these knowledge gaps and advance sustainability. With a boundary-spanning approach of education, participatory research, and extension, the project is identifying tradeoffs of the three strategies with explicit attention to pericoupling of the two adjacent regions and full consideration of the coupled ecological and social systems across those regions.