In publica commoda

Press release: Cows contribute to plant composition of their pastures

No. 164 - 30.08.2019

Researchers from Göttingen, Heidelberg and Zurich studied how cattle breed affects plant composition


Angus, or Highland Cattle: not all cows are the same when it comes to a preference for different herbaceous, grass and shrub species. Research carried out the Universities of Heidelberg and Göttingen in collaboration with the Swiss institute of Agroscope shows that cattle breed influences the botanical composition of pasture.  The results were recently published in the journal Agriculture, Ecosystems and Environment.

 

It is well known that by their consumption patterns, cattle, sheep and goats influence which plants grow on their pastures. Less well known, however, is the impact on vegetation of grazing by different cattle breeds. Production-oriented breeds like Charolais, Angus, Braunvieh and Simmental differ from robust breeds such as Highland Cattle or Galloway in terms of forage requirement, growth rate and weight. They also exhibit different behaviour in terms of movement and forage selection.

 

In order to find out how cattle breed influences pasture vegetation, researchers compared the botanical composition of pastureland that had been grazed for years by Highland cattle with adjoining pastureland grazed by more intensively reared cattle breeds. Altogether, the research team examined 50 pastures on 25 sites in mountain regions in Switzerland and southern Germany.

 

The study showed clear differences between the different cattle breeds: regardless of site conditions, significantly more plants with a high tolerance to grazing and trampling grew on pasture grazed by production-oriented breeds. On pastures grazed by Highland cattle, there were more species whose seeds spread by attach-ment to the animals’ fur. All in all, Highland cattle pastures boasted greater species richness than the reference pastures. Researchers also observed that the longer this cattle breed was on a pasture, the clearer the difference in composition. Moreover, the percentage of shrubs on the Highland cattle pastures was lower than on the reference pastures – an indication that Highland cattle are less choosy in their selection of forage.

 

Original publication: Pauler C.M., Isselstein J., Braunbeck T., Schneider M.K. Influence of Highland and production-oriented cattle breeds on pasture vegetation: a pairwise assessment across broad environmental gradients. Agriculture, Ecosystems and Environment (2019). Doi: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.agee.2019.106585

 

Contact:

Caren Pauler

Ruprecht-Karls-Universität Heidelberg

Im Neuenheimer Feld 504, 69120 Heidelberg

Tel: +49 157 357 310 56

Email: caren.pauler@gmx.de

 

Professor Johannes Isselstein

University of Göttingen

Department of Crop Sciences

Institute of Grassland Science

Tel: +49 (0) 551 3922253

Email: jissels@gwdg.de

 

Professor Thomas Braunbeck

Ruprecht-Karls-Universität Heidelberg

Im Neuenheimer Feld 504, 69120 Heidelberg

Tel: 06221 54-5668

Email: braunbeck@uni-hd.de

 

Dr Manuel Schneider

Agroscope

Reckenholzstrasse 191, CH-8046 Zürich

Tel. +41 58 468 75 98

Email: manuel.schneider@agroscope.admin.ch