So what?
Nebraska’s Bianca Andrade, Walter Schacht and colleagues recently concluded the longest-ever replicated study of mob grazing. Over an eight-year span, the team compared the practice — 36 steers rotating twice a day through a total of 120 sub-irrigated pastures during the Nebraska Sandhills’ growing season — against approaches in which nine steers rotated through four larger pastures just once every 10 or 15 days.
The team found that mob grazing led to the trampling of roughly half the standing plants, nearly double that of the conventional four-pasture rotations. Even so, the researchers measured no meaningful differences in the subsequent production, composition or root growth of pasture plants.
In fact, the percentage of available grasses consumed by the steers was generally lower in the mob-grazing condition. Probably as a result, those steers actually gained less weight — in some years, just one-fourth as much as their conventionally grazing counterparts.
Now what?
The team concluded that the purported benefits of more trampling are, if anything, limited. Ranchers might consider initiating mob grazing earlier in the growing season — when plants are leafier and more likely to be eaten — and introducing a second grazing cycle in the summer, the researchers suggested.
Source : unl.edu