By
Bonnie Coblentz MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Trees often are left in cattle pastures for shade
and beauty, but research has shown that they can be planted
there as a second crop without hindering the
first. Cattle,
hay and lumber can be produced on the same ground at the
same time. Known as silvopasture, it is the practice of
growing widely spaced pine trees on land that is being
farmed for cattle and hay production. John
Kushla, forestry specialist with Mississippi State
University's Extension Service, said the dual land
management system requires extra effort but offers short-
and long-term pay-offs. "The
selling point is you can grow as much pasture under a few
trees as you can under no trees," Kushla said. "The trees
that you have give you the benefit of a longer-term
investment that you can be working on while you're growing
livestock and forage." Silvopasture
is suited to cattle producers wanting to make extra money by
adding a forestry element or to forest landowners wanting to
add cattle. Kushla said it requires more intensive land
management than typically required in a timber
operation. The
practice is suited to existing pasture with and without
trees. Trees scattered in a pasture make cutting hay
difficult, but it does not limit the cow's ability to graze
the forage. Planting
trees in a pasture gives the advantage of spacing the trees
appropriately and making wide rows that hay cutting
equipment can navigate. "You
need to maintain low tree density to allow the grasses to
grow. You can alternate a couple of rows of trees with a
wide alley for pasture, then a couple more rows of trees,"
Kushla said. "This lends the possibility of grazing or
cutting hay." Plant
no more than 300 to 350 trees per acre rather than the
typical 600 to 700 pines planted per acre in a timber-only
tract. Keep livestock from grazing this pasture for about
three years, when the trees are more than 10 feet
tall. Because
of their low density, the trees require intensive
management, and the loss of a few trees can significantly
impact the financial return. "It
takes some very careful forestry to maintain the relatively
few trees you have out there," Kushla said. "You must thin,
prune, fertilize and apply herbicides carefully to maintain
the timber crop and retain the best trees for final
harvest." Kushla
said silvopasture is not widely practiced in Mississippi,
but Louisiana and Florida are promoting it to their
producers. Lynn
Ellison is an area forester with the Natural Resource
Conservation Service in Tupelo. He is preparing about 60
acres of land in Chickasaw County for silvopasture. He
started work on his land about a year ago. "The
land was in pasture when we started, and we came in and
killed the grass, bedded it and planted trees. We changed
our forage type from a warm-season to a cool-season grass,
which gave us a longer growing season in a time of year when
we needed it," Ellison said. He is
putting in a non-freezing water system and dividing the
acreage into cells for rotational grazing. He expects to
introduce cows to the newly prepared acreage next September
when the trees are about 2 _ years old. Ellison
said the cows will be managed no differently than they are
in any rotational grazing system, and the trees see
accelerated growth from the pasture fertilization applied
every year. "We're
pretty well convinced you can grow the same amount of grass
with or without the trees," Ellison said. "The cattle give
cash flow and at the end of the whole operation, you have
money for your retirement when you harvest the
trees." Ellison
said he began researching silvopasture after his office kept
getting calls from landowners interested in the
practice. "I kept
telling them it wouldn't work," Ellison said, but then he
visited operating systems in Texas, Florida, Georgia and
South Alabama. "We decided it would work for certain
situations. We modified our answer and now are encouraging
it for people willing to do it right." "Doing
it right" means rotating the cattle so they don't graze any
one section of pasture too long and managing the trees for
optimal growth. Left unmanaged, the system would collapse,
Ellison said. New
this year is a cost-sharing program offered by the NRCS
through the Environmental Quality Incentive Program, or
EQIP. More information is available at NRCS county
offices. Since
1989, MSU has been studying this practice at its Mississippi
Agricultural and Forestry Experiment Station McNeil Unit in
Pearl River County. -30- Released:
Oct. 7, 2004
Forestry,
Wildlife & Fisheries News
![]()
Same pasture
can grow
cattle, pine
Contact: Dr. John Kushla, (662) 566-2201
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 17-Aug-07 14:32:03
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/fwnews/fw04/041007pasture.html
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