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Suppression
of grasshoppers in the Great Plains through grazing management
by Dr. Jerome A. Onsager
Reprinted with permission from: Journal of Range Management, November
2000. 53:592-602
View the entire article (PDF)
Abstract
It was hypothesized that grazing management could mitigate grasshopper
outbreaks on native rangeland in the northern Great Plains. Key
practices would require deliberate variation in timing and intensity
of grazing events, preservation of canopy during critical periods
of grasshopper development, and reductions in areas of bare soil.
The twice-over rotational grazing system appeared compatible with
those requirements.
Grasshopper population trends were monitored during 1993-1995 and
1997-1998 on commercial native rangeland under twice-over rotational
grazing vs traditional season-long grazing. A ubiquitous pest grasshopper,
Melanoplus sanguinipes (Fabricius), occurred at every sample
site during each year in numbers sufficient to provide life history
parameters for comparison between treatments. Under rotational grazing,
the nymphs developed significantly slower and their stage-specific
survival rates were significantly lower and less variable. Consequently,
significantly fewer adults were produced significantly later in
the season under rotational grazing.
Seasonal presence of all grasshopper species combined averaged
3.3X higher under season-long grazing than under rotational grazing.
Local outbreaks that generated 18 and 27 adult grasshoppers per
m2 under season-long grazing in 1997 and 1998, respectively,
did not occur under rotational grazing. The outbreaks consumed 91%
and 168%, respectively, as much forage as had been allocated for
livestock, as opposed to 10% and 23%, respectively, under rotational
grazing.
Of 9 important grasshopper species, none were significantly more
abundant at rotational sites than at season-long sites. Three species
that were primary contributors to outbreaks under season-long grazing
remained innocuous under rotational grazing. It therefore appears
that outbreak suppression through grazing management is feasible
in the northern Great Plains.
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