A donkey guards baby goats. |
The
best way to protect woodlands from invasive plant species turns out to have
four legs, an insatiable appetite and a very low environmental impact,
according to a local scientist’s findings.
Since
fall 2011, Charlotte Clifford-Rathert, DVM, an assistant professor at Lincoln
University in Jefferson City, has been studying the use of goats to restore
native vegetation in woodlands at the school’s 280-acre Busby Farm, Missouri’s
largest organic research farm. She has found this system is beneficial for the
goats and the land.
“This
is a perfect place for goats,” Clifford-Rathert said. “Instead of mechanically [or
chemically] clearing you can use goats for less of an impact on the
environment. I’m really anxious for the next two years to show, ‘See? it really
does work.’”
To
conduct the three-year study, Clifford-Rathert partitioned off six seven-acre paddocks
of the farm’s woodlands; three are occupied by goats. The goats munch on
invasive species such as multiflora rose and Japanese honeysuckle, leaving the
forest floor weed-free and able to regrow native plants.
Clifford-Rathert
and her team of two graduate students move goats from acre to acre every four
to seven days and study the effects the goats have on the woodlands.
Researchers
observe the land and goats closely, monitoring weight gain, intestinal parasites
in the goats and soil fertility and compaction. The grazing has cleaned up the forest
floor, seriously diminishing invasive plants, and the goats have far less
parasites than if they had been grazing traditionally, Clifford-Rathert said.
Learning
about the effects of woodland grazing has several benefits, she said. Farmers can
make money on a wood crop by making their woodlands usable. Clifford-Rathert
said farmers could get a good wood crop every 10 to 15 years, with an annual
meat crop in between, when utilizing this agroforestry practice.
“It’s
frustrating to me that people have woodlands but aren’t using them,” she said.
Cleaning
up woodlands also diminishes the risk for forest fires, Clifford-Rathert said.
She
said the U.S. Department of Agriculture was interested in her research because
it could provide solutions to forest fire problems.
“If
that stuff is all gone, there’s no fuel to the fire,” she said. In addition to
benefitting farmers and providing a fix for forest fires, woodland grazing
restores the woods to their natural state. Clifford-Rathert said she’s become
very excited about the work she’s doing at Busby Farm.
“It’s
my passion; it’s really become what I get up in the morning to do,” she said. “I
see the potential, one year later, two years later, three years later. I can’t
wait for it.”
(By Katie Moritz, MU Center for Agroforestry Intern)
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