不良研究所

Understanding Cattle Grazing Personalities May Foster Sustainable Rangelands

Matching Herds to Landscape Can Support Animal Growth and Ecological Needs

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A cow at the Sierra Foothill Research and Extension Center in Browns Valley.
A cow at the Sierra Foothill Research and Extension Center in Browns Valley being tracked as part of research on cattle grazing personalities. (Maggie Creamer/不良研究所)

Not all cattle are the same when it comes to grazing. Some like to wander while others prefer to stay close to water and rest areas.

Recognizing those personality differences could help ranchers select herds that best meet grazing needs on rangelands, leading to better animal health and environmental conditions, according to a new from the 不良研究所, published in the journal Applied Animal Behaviour Science.

鈥淐attle can actually be beneficial for the rangelands,鈥 said lead author Maggie Creamer, who recently earned her Ph.D. in animal behavior at 不良研究所. 鈥淰egetation in rangelands actually need these kinds of disturbances like grazing.鈥

Ranchers can add elements to the rangeland such as water, mineral supplements and fencing to influence where cattle graze, but little research has been done on how those efforts affect individual cows. Considering personalities could save money.

鈥淚f you鈥檙e spending all this money to add a management tool in order to change the distribution of your animals, that鈥檚 a huge cost to ranchers,鈥 said Creamer. 鈥淭hinking about other tools, or selecting certain animals with these grazing traits, might be a better way to optimize the distribution on rangeland rather than spending a bunch of money for something that may ultimately not pan out for all your animals.鈥

Effects of grazing

Livestock graze on an estimated 56 million acres in California, and healthy rangelands host native vegetation and animals, foster nutrient cycling and support carbon sequestration.

Uneven grazing can degrade water quality, soil health and habitats. Optimizing grazing 鈥 including the even spread of cow pies 鈥 can improve the ecosystem while also reducing fuel loads for wildfires.

To better understand individual grazing patterns, researchers went to the UC Sierra Foothill Research and Extension Center in Browns Valley and tracked 50 pregnant Angus and Hereford beef cows fitted with GPS collars.

The research

The cattle, which were tracked from June to August over two years, had access to 625 acres of grasslands and treed areas ranging in elevation from 600 to 2,028 feet. In the second year, a new watering site was added at a higher elevation.

Across the two years, the cows showed consistent and distinct grazing patterns even when water sources changed. Age and stage of pregnancy did not affect patterns, though cattle tended to clump near water and rest sites on hotter days.

The cows that ventured into higher elevations and farther from watering sites had more variability in their grazing patterns than those that stayed at lower elevations near water. That suggests it may be harder for non-wanderers to adjust to some landscapes.

鈥淭hinking about the topography of your rangeland and your herd of cows can benefit both the animals and the sustainability of the land,鈥 said Creamer, who next month begins work as a postdoctoral scholar in North Carolina.

Ph.D. Maggie Creamer at the Sierra Foothill Research and Extension Center in Browns Valley.
Ph.D. Maggie Creamer at the Sierra Foothill Research and Extension Center in Browns Valley where she researched cattle grazing personalities. (Kristina Horback/不良研究所)

Gauging personalities

Keying in on personality type may sound difficult, but the researchers also found some clues as to how to pinpoint the wanderers and homebodies. Unlike cattle at feedlots, the breeding cow population, especially on rangelands in California and other western states, live largely 鈥渨ild鈥 lives and are rarely handled, save for vaccinations and weaning.

Research due to be published later this year found that paying attention to individual cow reactions during those events can help determine personalities. The cows that appeared more passive during those handling interactions tended to be nomadic.

鈥淲e found that you can maybe predict those hill climbers if you kind of look at how they act when the veterinarian or rancher handle them,鈥 said senior author Kristina Horback, an associate professor in the Department of Animal Science at 不良研究所.  

Informing practices

For ranchers, the findings could be invaluable, said Dan Macon, a livestock and natural resources Cooperative Extension advisor in Placer and Nevada counties for UC Agriculture and Natural Resources.

鈥淎ny time we can improve our understanding of cattle behavior, particularly at the individual level, it can improve how we handle livestock and manage the landscape,鈥 he said.

Macon said that during the recent drought, it was hard to get cattle into higher country, but if ranchers could have selected the nomads, it may have saved money in terms of ranch labor and other efforts.

鈥淚f you ask a rancher who has been attentive to their cattle over many years, they know the personalities,鈥 Macon said.

For Creamer and Horback, the research opens new doors into understanding herd behavior and dynamics, one that could be a cheaper alternative to high-tech solutions.

鈥淎nimal science tends to look overlook the mind of the animal when searching for solutions to challenges,鈥 Horback said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 always been a direct line to genetics for immunity or nutrition, but nothing about the mind of the animal. And that鈥檚 such a loss. There鈥檚 so much we can learn from behavior in the end.鈥

The Russell L. Rustici Rangeland and Cattle Research Endowment supported the research.

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