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Recommendation: Help Fight Global Warming by Increasing Soil’s Organic Matter

Farmers and ranchers can help fight global warming by building up the organic content of their lands using animal grazing techniques developed 25 years ago by the Albuquerque, New Mexico-based non-profit, Holistic Management International (HMI). These techniques focus on keeping the soil covered and giving grasses enough time to recover from animal grazing.

Albuquerque, NM (PRWEB) September 5, 2006 -- We can begin counteracting the effects of global warming if farmers and ranchers build up “the organic content of their farmlands,” says Texas agricultural consultant Malcolm Beck. They can do so by using animal grazing techniques developed 25 years ago by the Albuquerque, New Mexico-based non-profit, Holistic Management International (HMI).

Now being used on more than one million acres of land in the U.S., HMI’s methods conserve and enhance the soil’s organic content “in almost any weather condition.”

Beck made these observations in the June issue of Stockman Grassfarmer magazine.

Beck noted that global warming has occurred because the earth’s atmosphere is overloaded with huge amounts of Carbon Dioxide (CO2), released into the air by burning fossil fuels. Plants normally and naturally absorb CO2, but modern agricultural practices and worldwide deforestation have severely reduced their ability to do so.

Before modern agricultural methods were introduced, “it is estimated that the organic content of the soil in this country was between 4 and 8 percent,” says HMI’s Executive Director, Shannon Horst. However, after we adopted excessive plowing, non-organic fertilizers and continuous grazing, “the organic content of soil fell significantly, in some estimations by at least 50%.”

Horst points out that grazing planning and management practices taught by HMI would help offset the effects of global warming because they focuses on keeping the soil covered and providing grasses with enough time to recover from animal grazing. These practices have also been proven to reduce uses of synthetic fertilizers, pesticides and large equipment that consumes fossil fuels.

When a protective cover remains over the soil, the soil’s ability to trap moisture goes up, and this increases the microbial action essential to carbon sequestration. Erosion is reduced, plant roots absorb more water, flood damage is lessened, and healthy habitats are created that increase the diversity of native plant and wildlife species.

“In addition to all of these benefits,” Horst says, “ranchers using Holistic Management almost always have higher stocking rates and make more profit each year.”

HMI is offering farmers and ranchers an introductory weekend workshop in Albuquerque November 3-5, and a yearlong “Range and Ranch Management Training Program” for farmers and ranchers beginning September 16. More information is available from Ann Adams at HMI, (505) 842-5252.

Holistic Management International

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CONTACT INFORMATION
Jane Blume
DESERT SKY COMMUNICATIONS
505-294-1976
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ATTACHED FILES

May 2006: The same land, after a livestock herd grazed on the land and added organic matter to the soil.
These two photos were taken on land managed by the Africa Centre for Holistic Management near Victoria Falls, Zimbabwe. The first photo was taken in September of 2004 before any organic matter was added to the soil. The second photo was taken in May of 2006 after the Africa Centre's livestock herd grazed on the land, becoming a living land reclamation tool.

September 2004: Land managed by the Africa Centre for Holistic Management near Victoria Falls, Zimbabwe, before land and grazing management were started.
This photo, taken in September of 2004, shows the condition of the land as it had been for over 30 years.

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