Cattle Diets in the Blue Mountains of Oregon II. Forests
- 1 March 1982
- journal article
- research article
- Published by JSTOR in Journal of Range Management
- Vol. 35 (2) , 239-242
- https://doi.org/10.2307/3898400
Abstract
Esophageally fistulated cows were used on a forested range in northeastern Oregon to collect diet samples which were then analyzed by the microhistological technique. Grasses, forbs and shrubs averaged 61, 16 and 23% of the diet, respectively. Composition of diets differed among years and with seasonal advance. Idaho fescue and elk sedge were the most important forage species consumed. Forbs were used heavily in the early part of the grazing season before maturation. Browse comprised as much as 47% of the diet when green grass was unavailable. Cattle were opportunistic grazers and did not limit their selection to grass species. On forested ranges cattle diets varied among grazing periods within each year as well as among years.This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
- Diet Quality and Performance of Cattle on Forest and Grassland RangeJournal of Animal Science, 1981
- Factors Influencing Microhistological Analysis of Herbivore DietsJournal of Range Management, 1980
- Cattle Diets on Semidesert Grassland: Botanical CompositionJournal of Range Management, 1975
- Botanical and Nutritive Content of Diets of Cattle and Sheep under Single and Common Use on Mountain RangeJournal of Animal Science, 1967
- Botanical composition of sheep and cattle diets on a mature annual rangeHilgardia, 1965
- Use of Esophageal-Fistula Cannulae for Collecting Forage Samples from Both Sheep and Cattle Grazing in CommonJournal of Animal Science, 1963