Central Coast Rangeland Coalition

Rancher, Manager, and Scientist Forum on Rangeland Conservation

About

Established in 2011, the Rancher, Manager, and Scientist Forum on Rangeland Conservation focuses on key rangeland conservation topics identified through interviews with sponsor agency personnel and CCRC membership surveys. Under the joint supervision of university faculty and a CCRC co-principal investigator, graduate students conduct scientific literature reviews on each topic, prepare formal papers, and present their findings at CCRC meetings.  The Forum’s short-term goal is to provide research-based information to rangeland stakeholders, and the long-term goal is to improve communication and understanding among the myriad of rangeland stakeholders (ranchers, agency personnel, technical advisors/consultants, educators, scientists, and others). This work is generally showcased in spring CCRC meetings, as well as archived online (see links to Forum papers below).

Written by the Forum Scholars, each of these papers focus on a rangeland conservation topic.

Document
Forum Scholar
Prospects for grazing to AMP up soil carbon on California rangelands - in ReviewStanley, P.,
Bowles, T.,
Roche, L.
Holistic Management Shifts Ranchers’ Mental Models for Successful Adaptive GrazingPaige Stanley and Lynn Huntsinger
UC Berkeley
April 2022
Cattle grazing behavior and monitoring techniques and the impact on rangeland resources and conservationMegan Banwarth and Z. D. Mc Farlane,
Cal Poly State University, San Luis Obispo
October 2022
Are Landowners, Managers, and Range Management Academics on the Same Page About ConservationLina Aoyama and Lynn Huntsinger  University of California, Berkeley
Rangelands 41(1):61-69
February 2019
Perceptions of barriers and opportunities for conservation in Central CoastLina Aoyama
University of California, Berkeley
May 2018
Targeted and Prescribed Grazing in California's Central Coast RegionErin Campbell-Craven
Cal Poly State University, San Luis Obispo
2017
Compatibility of livestock grazing and recreational use on coastal California public lands: Importance, interactions, and management solutionsKristina M. Wolf, Roger A. Baldwin, and Sheila Barry
University of California, Davis
April 2016
Stewarding Soil- promoting soil quality to meet management objectives on California rangelandsJasmine Westbrook and Susan Edinger Marshall
Humboldt State University
October 2014
Sharing the range- managing wildlife impacts to livestock production in California Coast Range working landscapesSheri Spiegal
University of California, Berkeley
October 2014
Grazing for conservation on public lands in urban California: rancher and manager perspectives on the prospects for partnershipGareth Fisher
University of California, Berkeley
March 18, 2012
Livestock management and water qualityLewis Reed
University of California, Santa Cruz
April 2011

Sponsors

This work has been made possible by generous support from several local partners.

EXTERNAL IMAGE Elkhorn Slough Coastal Training Program

EXTERNAL IMAGE Midpeninsula Regional Open Space District

EXTERNAL IMAGE East Bay Regional Parks District

TERNAL IMAGE The Nature Conservancy of California