Deseret Land and Livestock has been using rotational grazing management for a few decades now. Rotational grazing is a system where the cattle are moved from pasture to pasture every 7-10 days and the plants are allowed to regenerate. The combination of grazing and appropriate rest has enhanced the range creating additional opportunities for cattle, wildlife, and forage.
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lol @ leaving fields fallow being equated with rotational grazing. Not even close. Leaving fields fallow is terrible.
This is a technique that should be adopted on an industrial scale. Integrating livestock agriculture with sustainable land management would bring optimal outcomes for each with a side benefit of protecting against vegan arguments over the ethical and ecological impacts of livestock agriculture. Their health arguments are already on shaky ground due to science demonstrating that processed foods and processed meats being more likely sources of health risks. But if the meat industry can clean up the dirty image of factory farming with a newer, environmentally sound method then sky's the limit.
I believe ranches could benefit a lot from putting their herds together. This will reduce the cost of fencing and water and if moved more often at higher density, it'll also increase the health of the ecosystem with less exposed time to the plants and more trampling of forage to cover the soil form heat and increase water infiltrating into the soil, to produce more forage.