1 / 11

Goats as Grazing Animals for Invasive Plant Management 2005-2006

Goats as Grazing Animals for Invasive Plant Management 2005-2006. Goats eating Oriental bittersweet.Jordan. Bill Jacobs, Kathy Schwager, Marilyn Jordan: The Nature Conservancy Karen Kazel: Suffolk County Farm.

yachi
Download Presentation

Goats as Grazing Animals for Invasive Plant Management 2005-2006

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Goats as Grazing Animals for Invasive Plant Management 2005-2006 Goats eating Oriental bittersweet.Jordan Bill Jacobs, Kathy Schwager, Marilyn Jordan: The Nature Conservancy Karen Kazel: Suffolk County Farm

  2. SUMMARY: The Nature Conservancy carried out this goat grazing project at the Suffolk County Farm in 2005-2005. Results were presented at the August 24, 2006 meeting of the Long Island Invasive Species Management Area (LIISMA). Goats are great at eating woody plants, and will even eat the bark off of trees. They also eat some herbaceous plants, but first they eat woody species, then they move on to herbaceous plants in order of their gastronomic preference. Mugwort (Artemisia vulgaris) is down near the bottom of the goat menu. Swallow-wort (Cynanchum rossicum and C. louisae) are toxic. Grass cover tends to either increase slightly, or remain unchanged, as long as there are plenty of other plants to eat. Goats eat more intensively "close to home" (i.e. location of water and shelter) than farther away. Thus a long narrow pen like the one we used is not the ideal shape for uniform woody control, though good for seeing effects of browse along an intensity gradient. Browsing doesn't kill woody plants after just one summer of goat exposure, so when goats are removed the woodies (and other plants) grow back. Repeated browsing for a couple of years, or following one year of browse with herbicide in year two, would be required for permanent kill of woody plants (and possibly herbaceous perennials). So goats are good for woody control in grasslands. Not good for forests where abundant deer already fill the goat niche much too well. Text, data analysis and photograph by Marilyn J. Jordan, Ph.D. Senior Conservation Scientist, The Nature Conservancy on Long Island. Uplands Farm Sanctuary. 250 Lawrence Hill Rd., Cold Spring Harbor, NY 11724 USA (631) 367-3225 mjordan@tnc.org

  3. Goat pen 25 ft x 370 ft Pen 1 grazed 4/14/06 to 5/21/06 Monitored 1st time: August 15, 2005 Monitored 2nd time: June 29, 2006 Grazed 5 weeks; ungrazed 6 weeks Pen 2 & 3 grazed 5/21/06 Monitored: June 29, 2006 Grazed 5 weeks

  4. Pen 1 Before & After Grazing 2005 (before) 2006 (after)

  5. Grazed 5 weeks; ungrazed 6 weeks

  6. Goat pen | Sheep pen Goats prefer woody vegetation whereas sheep prefer herbaceous.

  7. Grazed Pen #2 | Ungrazed Pen #4 June 29, 2006

  8. Grazed and Ungrazed

  9. Grazed Pen #3 | Ungrazed Pen #4

  10. Bark eaten off trees Multiflora rose Japanese honeysuckle

  11. THE END

More Related