Identifying and addressing sustainable pasture and grazing management options for a major economic sector – the north Australian beef industry

<p class="IGCabstract">Sustainable use of Australia’s northern grazing lands is a long-standing issue for management and policy, heightened by projections of increased climatic variability, uncertainty of forage supplies, vegetation complexes and weeds and diseases. Meat &amp; Li...

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Main Authors: Neil D. MacLeod, Joe C. Scanlan, Lester I. Pahl, Giselle L. Whish, Robyn A. Cowley
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Centro Internacional de Agricultura Tropical 2013-12-01
Series:Tropical Grasslands-Forrajes Tropicales
Online Access:http://tropicalgrasslands.info/index.php/tgft/article/view/91
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spelling doaj-92a63742751648059a40313c7cf094712020-11-24T22:16:54ZengCentro Internacional de Agricultura TropicalTropical Grasslands-Forrajes Tropicales2346-37752013-12-011222022410.17138/tgft(1)220-22456Identifying and addressing sustainable pasture and grazing management options for a major economic sector – the north Australian beef industryNeil D. MacLeodJoe C. ScanlanLester I. PahlGiselle L. WhishRobyn A. Cowley<p class="IGCabstract">Sustainable use of Australia’s northern grazing lands is a long-standing issue for management and policy, heightened by projections of increased climatic variability, uncertainty of forage supplies, vegetation complexes and weeds and diseases. Meat &amp; Livestock Australia has supported a large study to explore sustainable grazing management strategies and increase the capacity of the sector to address climate change. Potential options were explored by bio-economic modeling of ‘representative’ beef enterprises defined by pastoralists and supported by regional research and extension specialists. Typical options include diversification, infrastructure, flexible stocking rates, wet season resting and prescribed fire. Concurrent activities by another team included regional impact assessments and surveys of pastoralists’ understanding of and attitudes towards climate change and adaptive capacity. The results have been widely canvassed and a program of on-ground demonstrations of various options implemented. The paper describes the structure of this program and highlights key results indicating considerable scope to address sustainability challenges.</p>http://tropicalgrasslands.info/index.php/tgft/article/view/91
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Neil D. MacLeod
Joe C. Scanlan
Lester I. Pahl
Giselle L. Whish
Robyn A. Cowley
spellingShingle Neil D. MacLeod
Joe C. Scanlan
Lester I. Pahl
Giselle L. Whish
Robyn A. Cowley
Identifying and addressing sustainable pasture and grazing management options for a major economic sector – the north Australian beef industry
Tropical Grasslands-Forrajes Tropicales
author_facet Neil D. MacLeod
Joe C. Scanlan
Lester I. Pahl
Giselle L. Whish
Robyn A. Cowley
author_sort Neil D. MacLeod
title Identifying and addressing sustainable pasture and grazing management options for a major economic sector – the north Australian beef industry
title_short Identifying and addressing sustainable pasture and grazing management options for a major economic sector – the north Australian beef industry
title_full Identifying and addressing sustainable pasture and grazing management options for a major economic sector – the north Australian beef industry
title_fullStr Identifying and addressing sustainable pasture and grazing management options for a major economic sector – the north Australian beef industry
title_full_unstemmed Identifying and addressing sustainable pasture and grazing management options for a major economic sector – the north Australian beef industry
title_sort identifying and addressing sustainable pasture and grazing management options for a major economic sector – the north australian beef industry
publisher Centro Internacional de Agricultura Tropical
series Tropical Grasslands-Forrajes Tropicales
issn 2346-3775
publishDate 2013-12-01
description <p class="IGCabstract">Sustainable use of Australia’s northern grazing lands is a long-standing issue for management and policy, heightened by projections of increased climatic variability, uncertainty of forage supplies, vegetation complexes and weeds and diseases. Meat &amp; Livestock Australia has supported a large study to explore sustainable grazing management strategies and increase the capacity of the sector to address climate change. Potential options were explored by bio-economic modeling of ‘representative’ beef enterprises defined by pastoralists and supported by regional research and extension specialists. Typical options include diversification, infrastructure, flexible stocking rates, wet season resting and prescribed fire. Concurrent activities by another team included regional impact assessments and surveys of pastoralists’ understanding of and attitudes towards climate change and adaptive capacity. The results have been widely canvassed and a program of on-ground demonstrations of various options implemented. The paper describes the structure of this program and highlights key results indicating considerable scope to address sustainability challenges.</p>
url http://tropicalgrasslands.info/index.php/tgft/article/view/91
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