Federal lands ranching faces a half-century of decline

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Federal lands ranching faces a half-century of decline

How grazing fell from its Western pedestal — and fueled Sagebrush Rebellion.
Notes on sourcing and methodology

This data originated from BLM and USFS annual reports.
BLM and USFS early stocking rates were difficult to measure accurately, as federal policies gave ranchers the incentive to report no more and no fewer animals than they were officially permitted, which may have differed from actual cattle on the range.
Agencies first measured “actually grazed” territory in the ’50s and ’60s by trudging onto rangelands and counting cattle; because of the method’s difficulty, they later began measuring based on billed AUMs.
Before 1977, the Forest Service measured by animal-month, so those numbers have been converted to be consistent with animal-unit-month. We followed the agency’s recommendations and multiplied the early numbers by a factor of 1.2. However, this is not an exact conversion.
The average weight of a cow has increased since the early 20th century, which means each AUM may have a potentially higher environmental impact.
Forest Service data for 1992 and 1999 are unavailable.
This reporting was done with support from Stanford University’s Bill Lane Center for the American West.

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