The influence of rest and deferment on beef cattle diet quality and composition after an August wildfire on perennial bunchgrass rangeland in southwestern Montana

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Montana State University - Bozeman, College of Agriculture

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Current management paradigms suggest deferring burned rangeland for two years after a fire. However, there has been little research into how forage quality changes within the first two years after a fire and how it affects livestock diet quality, botanical composition, and foraging efficiency. Study 1 evaluated the differences between unburned and burned pastures during the first year after a fire, and Study 2 evaluated the differences in rested and unrested pastures. Pastures were arranged in a randomized complete block design contrasting June versus September, burn versus unburn (Study 1), and one-year rest versus no rest (Study 2). Pastures were grazed in either June or September by cow-calf pairs for two days at a time. Cattle diet composition and masticate samples were collected during 20-minte bite-count periods using six ruminally cannulated cows in each pasture prior to and after two-day grazing periods. Composition of diets upon pasture entry differed among treatments (P < 0.01) with June diets having greater proportions of forbs than September diets. In addition, June diets with no deferment had greater forb composition than June diets with one year deferment (P < 0.01). Crude protein in June diets was substantially greater than that in September diets (P < 0.01) and within the June grazing period, highest for the non-deferred treatment (P < 0.01). June diets had lower neutral detergent fiber (NDF) concentrations than September diets (P < 0.01) and within the June grazing treatments, the first year after burning was lowest in NDF content (P < 0.01). There were no differences in ash concentration averaging 16.46% across all treatments and years (P ? 0.07). There was no effect of grazing treatment on grams per bite (P ? 0.34) averaging 1.36 grams per bite for pre- and post-grazing treatments. Season of use and timing of grazing following a wildfire impacts cattle diet composition and quality, with the greatest impact in the spring following a wildfire. Cattle diets in the burned sites were high quality (higher CP, lower NDF) during the growing season immediately following a wildfire.

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