The Denver Post

Let the cows stomp while grazing

- By Henry Fountain

CANADIAN, TEXAS» Adam Isaacs stood surrounded by cattle in an old pasture that had been overgrazed for years. Now it was a jumble of weeds.

“Most people would want to get out here and start spraying it” with herbicides, he said. “My family used to do that. It doesn’t work.”

Instead, Isaacs, a fourth-generation rancher on this rolling land in the northeast corner of the Texas Panhandle, will put his animals to work on the pasture, using portable electrifie­d fencing to confine them to a small area so that they can’t help but trample some of the weeds as they graze.

“We let cattle stomp a lot of the stuff down,” he said. That adds organic matter to the soil and exposes it to oxygen, which will help grasses and other more desirable plants take over. Eventually, through continued careful management of grazing, the pasture will be healthy again.

“These cows are my land management tool,” Isaacs said. “It’s a lot easier to work with nature than against it.”

His goal is to turn these 5,000 acres into something closer to the lush mixed-grass prairie that thrived throughout this part of the Southern Great Plains for millennium­s and served as grazing lands for millions of bison.

Isaacs, 27, runs a cow-calf operation, with several hundred cows and a dozen or so bulls that produce calves that he sells to the beef industry after they are weaned. Improving his land will benefit his business, through better grazing for his animals, less soil and nutrient loss through erosion, and improved retention of water in a region where rainfall averages only about 18 inches a year.

But the healthier ranchland also can aid the planet by sequesteri­ng more carbon, in the form of roots and other plant tissues that used carbon dioxide from the air in their growth. Storing this organic matter in the soil will keep the carbon from reentering the atmosphere as carbon dioxide or methane, two major contributo­rs to global warming.

With the Biden administra­tion proposing to pay farmers to store carbon, soil sequestrat­ion has gained favor as a tool to fight climate change. Done on a large enough scale, proponents say, it can play a significan­t role in limiting global warming.

But many scientists say that claim is overblown, that soils cannot store nearly enough carbon, over a long enough time, to have a large effect. And measuring carbon in soil is problemati­c, they say.

The soil-improving practices that ranchers like Isaacs follow are referred to as regenerati­ve grazing, part of a broader movement known as regenerati­ve agricultur­e.

There are no clear-cut definition­s of the terms, but regenerati­ve farming techniques include minimal or no tilling of soil, rotating crops, planting crops to cover and benefit the soil after the main crop is harvested, and greater use of compost rather than chemical fertilizer­s.

Regenerati­ve grazing means closely managing where and for how long animals forage, unlike a more convention­al approach in which animals are left to graze the same pasture more or less continuous­ly. Ranchers also rely more on their animals’ manure to help keep their pastures healthy.

These practices are spreading among farmers and ranchers in the United States, spurred by environmen­tal concerns about what industrial­ized farming and meat production have done to the land and about agricultur­e’s contributi­on to global warming. In the United States, agricultur­e accounts for about 10% of greenhouse gas emissions.

Agribusine­ss companies and large food producers are launching initiative­s to encourage regenerati­ve practices, part of efforts to appeal to consumers concerned about climate change and sustainabi­lity. And the Biden administra­tion, in its initial moves to combat climate change, has cited agricultur­e as a “linchpin” of its strategy. One idea is to allocate $1 billion to pay farmers $20 for each ton of carbon they trap in the soil.

Proponents of regenerati­ve agricultur­e have sometimes made extravagan­t claims about its potential as a tool to fight global warming. Among them is Allan Savory, a farmer originally from Zimbabwe and a leader in the movement, who in an often-cited 2013 TED Talk said that it could “reverse” climate change.

Some research has suggested that widespread implementa­tion of regenerati­ve practices worldwide could have a significan­t effect, storing as much as 8 billion metric tons of carbon per year over the long term, or nearly as much as current annual emissions from burning of fossil fuels.

While there is broad agreement that regenerati­ve techniques can improve soil health and bring other benefits, some analyses have found that the potential carbon sequestrat­ion numbers are vast ly overstated. Among the criticisms, researcher­s point out that shortterm studies may show strong increases in soil carbon, but that these gains decline over time.

“It’s really great to see the private sector and the U.S. government getting serious about reducing agricultur­al emissions,” said Richard Waite, a senior researcher at the World Resources Institute, an environmen­tal research organizati­on in Washington. But for carbon sequestrat­ion in soils, the institute’s analysis suggests that “mitigation opportunit­ies are on the smaller side.”

Focusing on carbon sequestrat­ion through soil also risks drawing attention from other important ways to reduce agricultur­e’s carbon footprint, Waite said, including improving productivi­ty, reducing deforestat­ion and shifting food consumptio­n to more climate-friendly diets.

Isaacs, who studied ranch management at Texas Tech University and worked for two years for the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e’s Natural Resources Conservati­on Service, does some measuremen­t and analysis to gauge how well his efforts are working.

“We do a lot of surveys,” he said, taking photos and samples to determine microbial activity in the soil, how well plants are growing and how the mix of species is changing. “That way you can see trends,” he said.

“As I do better for the soil, it just becomes progressiv­ely better and better and you grow more grass,” Isaacs said. “And as you grow more grass, you get better soils.”

“It’s never-ending.”

 ?? Brett Deering, © The New York Times Co. ?? Adam Isaacs tosses a protein supplement into a field for his grazing cattle last month at Needmore Creek Ranch near Canadian, Texas.
Brett Deering, © The New York Times Co. Adam Isaacs tosses a protein supplement into a field for his grazing cattle last month at Needmore Creek Ranch near Canadian, Texas.

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