Home
Introduction
Rangeland Issues
Climate &
Weather
Economics
Range Education
General Resources
About this site
Site Map
Ask
Questions
Feedback/
Suggest a Link
|
Introduction to Hawaii
Rangelands
Rangelands are a type of land, not a use of
land. They are not urban land and they are not agricultural crop land.
They include some forests, some woodlands and other vegetation
types
not usually associated with range, but primarily, rangelands are
grasslands, shrublands and savannas, and grasslands with scattered
trees and shrubs.
Rangelands are used for many purposes. They
provide wildlife habitat, forage for livestock, recreational
opportunities, open space, scenic beauty, and they serve as watersheds.
Rangelands offer a variety of products and values. Usually these uses
are mixed and sometimes they are competing.
In Rangeland Ecology and Management.,
(Boulder, Colorado: Westview Press, 1994), H.F. Heady and D. Child
define range managment as:
"Range management is a discipline and an art
that skillfully applies an organized body of knowledge accumulated by
range science and practical experience for two purposes: (1)
protection, improvement, and continued welfare of the basic resources,
which in many situations include soils, vegetation, endangered plants
and animals, wilderness, water, and historical sites; and (2) optimum
production of goods and services in combinations needed by
society...Management of rangeland requires selection of alternative
techniques for optimum production of goods and services with no
resource damage...While emphasis is often placed on effects and
management of domestic animals, the overriding goal is rangeland
resource rehabilitation, protection, and management for multiple
objectives including biological diversity, preservation, and
sustainable development for people."
Rangeland managers usually focus on the soils
and vegetation and the impact of animals, including man, on these.
Within rangeland management, however, people can also specialize in
plant ecology, plant physiology, wildlife habitat, animal science,
economics, even sociology and political science.
Text adapted from the Arizona
Rangelands web site
|