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Sustainable Rangelands Roundtable

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The indicators will continue to evolve as the SRR ... provide the current generation with a wide variety of goods and services ... edible/medicinal. plants ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Sustainable Rangelands Roundtable


1
Sustainable Rangelands Roundtable
  • Development and Evolution of the
  • Criteria and Indicators

2
Overview
  • Criteria
  • Productive Capacity
  • Soil and Water Resources
  • Ecosystem Health and Diversity
  • Social and Economic Benefits
  • Legal, Institutional, Economic Frameworks
  • Indicators within these Criteria
  • Scientific Challenges
  • Next Technical Steps

3
A journey of 1000 miles begins with 1 step
  • Criteria and indicators described here represent
    the current development.
  • The indicators will continue to evolve as the SRR
    advances towards an accepted set for monitoring
    and assessing rangeland sustainability.

4
Criteria
Productive Capacity
Legal, Institutional and Economic Framework
Sustainable Rangelands
Health and Diversity
Soil and Water
Social and Economic
  • Indicators

5
Maintenance of Productive Capacity on Rangeland
Ecosystems
  • Productive capacity provide the current
    generation with a wide variety of goods and
    services depending on the mix desired by society
    at any particular time
  • Maintenance that future generations will be
    able to obtain their desired mix...
  • Indicators must capture Determinants of
    Productive Capacity, and the Variety of Outputs
    that can be produced on Rangelands

6
Indicators Determinants of Productive Capacity
  • Aboveground
  • Biomass Production

Integrates biotic and abiotic factors influencing
capacity
Indicates shifts in a major commodity product
  • Rangeland available
  • for livestock grazing

7
Indicators Productive Capacity Outputs
  • Domestic Livestock

Number of cattle, sheep, goats, horses, bison
measures a consumptive use
  • Wildlife Density

Direct measure of wildlife numbers indirect for
recreation
  • Harvest of landscape
  • edible/medicinal
  • plants

Measures the variety of other consumptive uses
8
Maintenance of Ecological Health and Diversity of
Rangelands
  • Rangeland health .. degree to which the
    integrity of the soil and the ecological
    processes of rangelands are sustained
  • Nutrient cycling, energy flow, hydrologic
    processes
  • Biodiversity .. variety of life and its
    processes which encompasses the variety of
    living organisms, the genetic differences among
    them and the communities and ecosystems in which
    they occur
  • Landscape, community, population, genetics

9
Indicators Health and Diversity
Trends in land status
  • Extent of rangeland
  • Annual production

Energy capture storage
  • Changes in fire regimes

Fire freq., intensity extent
  • Riparian condition

Veg. watershed health
  • Wetland Abundance

Number extent
10
Indicators Health and Diversity
  • Fragmentation
  • Plant Communities
  • Parcel Size
  • Different Management

Captures changes in landscape patterns,
connectedness, habitats
  • Plant Communities
  • Area
  • Invasives, Non-natives
  • Vegetation Classes

Captures changes in plant community structure and
function
  • Population Dynamics
  • Species communities of
  • concern
  • Selected Species

Captures finer scale details for individual
species communities
11
Conservation and Maintenance of Soil and Water
Resources
  • Soils influence hydrologic processes by providing
    the medium for the capture, storage, and release
    of water.
  • Flow of water through rangelands influences soil
    physical and biological properties.
  • In most rangelands, water is extremely limiting.

12
Indicators Soil and Water Resources
  • Area of Rangeland with

Measures loss of soil
  • Significant Erosion

Physical properties affecting water infiltration
  • Significant Compaction
  • Changes in aggregate
  • stability
  • Bare ground

Potential for erosion through resistances to wind
and water
  • Diminished Organic Matter
  • Changes in Soil Organisms
  • Pesticide Application

Measures of soil productivity, and ties to water
quality
13
Indicators Soil and Water Resources
  • Percent of Water Bodies with
  • Variation in Natural Range of Biological
    Diversity
  • Variation in pH, Chemicals, Temperature,
    Sedimentation

Indicates changes in water quality and aquatic
habitat conditions
Indicates potential for changes in vegetation and
water availability
  • Changes in Groundwater
  • Changes in stream
  • Flow amounts timing
  • Dry periods
  • Geometry

Assesses watershed functioning, and impacts to
aquatic and terrestrial diversity
14
Maintenance and Enhancement of Multiple Economic
and Social Benefits to Current and Future
Generations
  • Socio-economic indicators provide a measure of
    societal values reflecting allocation of scarce
    economic resources.
  • Economic indicators complement social measures by
    assessing changes resulting from adjustments in
    social, ecological, legal, and political systems.

15
Indicators Social and Economic Benefits
  • Social measures are widely available
    Population, Migration, Mortality, Education,
    Income, etc.
  • However, few are rangeland-specific.
  • For example, social acceptability of rangeland
    policies, practices, conditions
  • Assumption Human communities are better off if
    rangelands are both healthy and productive.

16
Indicators Social and Economic Benefits
  • Area managed for
  • Cultural, Spiritual Values
  • Subsistence
  • Non-consumptive-use

Assess management support for these values and
uses
  • Land Ownership

Measures effect of change
  • New Technologies

Assess adoption for improvement and protection
Assesses how use and conditions impact
range-dependent communities
  • Viability and adaptability of social systems

17
Indicators Social and Economic Benefits
  • Amount and Economic Value
  • AUMs
  • Forage
  • Non-livestock products

Assess availability and value of diverse uses
  • Management for Recreation
  • Area, Facilities, Visitors

Assess desire for tourism, recreation, wilderness
  • Investment in Rangelands

Demand for different uses
  • Rangeland Research, Development and Education

Investment in the future
18
Indicators Social and Economic Benefits
  • Ranching Sector
  • Use of new technology
  • Rate of return
  • Employment in sector

Ability to remain in business, importance in
total employment
  • Land Use and Conservation
  • Conservation easements
  • Ownership by NGOs
  • Contribution to restoration

Willingness to contribute to conservation by
people and by organizations
Identifies where investment income is occurring
  • Trade Flows between Rural and Urban Areas

19
Legal, Institutional, and Economic Framework for
Rangeland Conservation and Sustainable Management
  • Sustainable rangelands are influenced by
  • U.S. laws, regulations, guidelines,
  • Issues of equity, cultural traditions, legal
    rights and obligations, and
  • Availability of scientific understanding and
    appropriate management technologies and skills.

20
Legal, Institutional and Economic Frameworks
Criteria
  • Support for sustainability through frameworks of
  • Legal
  • Institutional
  • Economic

Property rights, range-related planning, public
involvement in policy, investment, taxation
  • Capacity to monitor change in sustainable
    management

Inventories, policy review, enforcement of laws
and regulations
  • Capacity in RD aimed at improving management and
    delivery of goods and services

Existence of research and development programs
21
Challenges
  • Capacity? To what extent can productive capacity
    be measured?
  • Transition between rangeland and forests? What
    triggers identification of land as rangeland vs.
    forests?
  • Scale? National inventory
  • Integration? Links between economic, social, and
    ecological sustainability?

22
Next Technical Steps
  • Reduce duplication of indicators
  • Develop protocols for evaluating indicators
  • Protocols for identifying evaluating data sets
  • Inventory structure at national level
  • Agency roles
  • First Approximation Report

23
A journey of 1000 miles begins with 1 step
Future Plans
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