Water Quality Implications of Cattle Grazing on a Semiarid Watershed in Southeastern Utah
Citation
Buckhouse, J. C., & Gifford, G. F. (1976). Water quality implications of cattle grazing on a semiarid watershed in southeastern Utah. Journal of Range Management, 29(2), 109-113.Publisher
Society for Range ManagementJournal
Journal of Range ManagementDOI
10.2307/3897404Additional Links
https://rangelands.org/Abstract
During 1973 and 1974 wildland water quality analyses were performed on a semiarid, chained and seeded, pinyon-juniper site in southeastern Utah. The area was treated in 1967 and protected from grazing until 1974. In 1974 livestock grazing was introduced and investigations continued to determine if any deleterious land use effects were present from fecal contamination by cattle. No significant changes were noted in fecal and total coliform production (fecal pollution bacterial indicators) from grazing use. There is an element of risk involved whenever data generated from a small area are projected to larger land areas. However, it appears that this level of livestock grazing (2 ha/AUM) did not constitute a public health hazard in terms of fecal pollution indicators on the semiarid watershed.Type
textArticle
Language
enISSN
0022-409Xae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.2307/3897404