The Sahel and savannah can support herds of animals for grazing.
Pampas.
Pampas.
Horses are required to supervise, move, and round up the cattle in the vast grazing areas.
It depends on where the cattle farming is taking place. Some areas where people have little ideas of how to properly graze their cattle, the erosion in those areas is high. But in areas where farmers and ranchers are maintaining good to great grazing practices, there is little to no soil erosion happening.
Cattle ranching
The open ranges of Texas and Colorado were used for cattle ranching and grazing. These vast expanses of land provided ample space for livestock to roam freely and graze on grass. Ranchers often herded their cattle across these open ranges to find the best grazing areas.
Cattle Ranching - Apex -Just took the test-
The open range was primarily in the Western United States, particularly states like Texas, Wyoming, and Montana. These areas were vast stretches of unfenced land where cattle could roam freely, making them ideal for cattle ranching and grazing.
Cattle ranchers moved north due to factors such as cheaper land prices, better grazing areas, and lower competition for resources. The northern regions also offered more land for expansion and development of their cattle operations.
Texas, New Mexico, and Colorado. (Apex) "Your Welcome" quote from Sadie Saxton
Saskatchewan is primarily used for agriculture, with over half of the land dedicated to cropland and another third to pasture and grazing. There are also areas used for forestry, mining, urban development, and conservation purposes.
Well the biggest threat is people consuming the wilderness for homes and strip malls. Also the cattle ranchers threaten the mustang by saying they overgraze the land that they feed their privately owned cattle on. The cattle vastly outnumber the horses and strip the land faster, leaving little for the horse to live on. Another Answer: Uncontrolled, continuous grazing by cattle which encourages overgrazing in many areas of the federally-owned public lands where numerous ranchers (not all, though) set their cattle to graze in the summer months is possibly what may threaten the survival of the wild mustangs of the Southwestern US. However, such grazing also threatens the well-being of the cattle, as they do not have as many areas to graze as they should have when they were first shipped to graze on such public lands. However, there have been various anecdotal evidence of horses and burros not even having their grazing land and watering holes in the same vicinity as that of cattle. The fact that they're threatened by decreased grazing land available some have shown to be untrue, as well as claims that many of the wild horses were found to be thin and emaciated. The BLM is responsible for maintaining horse populations to ensure the competition for food and water does not get out of hand. However, the topic of wild horses and their "direct" conflict/competition with cattle for grazing space is an on-going debate and there really is no right nor wrong answer.