It depends on the area that a plan has to be done for. Unless one can specifically tell where this degradation and desertification is happening, be it in the Rough Fescue grassland of Central Alberta or the Foothills of Montana, among other places, only then can we really come up with a suitable management and sustainment plan for rangeland degradation and desertification for that area.
Typically with any plan we need to have a long-term objective (over 5 to 10 years), a basic detailed outline of what should be done (for instance, decrease grazing pressure, use of fire to increase rangeland productivity, etc.) and a short-term plan of how things should be carried out (i.e., a step-by-step process of how decreasing grazing pressure or how a different grazing plan will increase rangeland health and how it will be carried out).
But as far as that, there's no telling of how an actual plan can be laid out without the knowledge of where this plan should be allocated.
Murphy's Law: Anything that can go wrong, will go wrong. This Law applies to anything you plan on doing, no matter if it's rangeland management, improving land for better conservation management, or even if you are farming. Things don't always go to plan, for some reason or another. Weather and human error are the main culprits to make the implementation of rangeland sustainment efforts more challenging, because you are not working in a controlled environment like you would in a laboratory. You are subject to Mother Nature's moods, no matter what you can or cannot do. And humans make mistakes; they are not perfect. So, "Even the best of plans laid forth do not always meet the desired result." I hate to say it, but it's as simple as that!
There is no such thing as "temperature rangeland."
Mitchel P. McClaran has written several books in the field of ecology and conservation, focusing on topics such as plant ecology, restoration ecology, and rangeland management. Some of his notable works include "Rangeland Systems: Processes, Management and Challenges" and "Rangeland Ecology and Management."
Rangeland is sustained by both managing for multiple use basing management decisions on sound ecological principles to optimize returns in combination with that most desired by and suitable to society. This is done by reducing human control of inputs and outputs and increasing natural feedback processes.
The population of Absard Rangeland Research Centre is 40.
Rangeland - 1922 was released on: USA: 26 January 1922
Ali Mohamed El Hassan has written: 'Rangeland rehabilitation' -- subject(s): Range management, Rangelands
Rangeland - 1922 is rated/received certificates of: USA:Passed (National Board of Review)
This is called Rangeland, however even rangeland can be fenced. Ultimately, just because a certain area has fences doesn't mean it's a pasture or field: it can still be considered rangeland even if it has fences on it.
Horticulture is the science that deals with the studies of plants. This includes things like herbology, silvoculture, crop science, pasture and rangeland science and management, plant biology, etc.
Erosion, overgrazing, and the removal of animals from one area to another where they take the nutrients they took from the plants they ate in one area and deposited somewhere else. The biggest nutrient loss occurs when a rangeland gets turned into something that is anything but a rangeland.
Rangeland Romances - 2004 was released on: USA: 16 October 2004 (Chicago International Festival for Cinema of the Deaf)