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West Texas Rangelands
West Texas RangelandsWe hope to provide a variety of science-based rangeland information and current research on prescribed fire, wildfires, brush management, and grazing management!
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Five Characteristics of a Rangeland Steward

September 3, 2025 by jaime.sanford

What a privilege to be asked by West Texas Rangelands to write a short article about “Five Characteristics of a Rangeland Steward!” My range career started in the seventh grade when I participated in my first 4-H Rangeland Evaluation Contest in Junction, Texas.  However, I didn’t learn about rangeland stewardship until I was a junior in high school while attending the Texas Section Youth Range Workshop.  Since the inception of YRW, the rangeland stewardship component has been a fundamental component.  So important that we start and finish each day with STEWARDSHIP.  The following five characteristics of a rangeland steward are in no particular order for I feel that the whole is greater than the parts.

[Read more…] about Five Characteristics of a Rangeland Steward

Filed Under: Conservation Practices, Grazing Management

A Flood of Change: What July’s Historic Rains Mean for Texas’ Drought Outlook

August 27, 2025 by jaime.sanford

Texas endured a dramatic climatic shift in July—one that’s already rewriting the story of our drought and breaking 131 year records. But even as optimism swells, persistent vulnerabilities remind us the path to recovery is far from over.

[Read more…] about A Flood of Change: What July’s Historic Rains Mean for Texas’ Drought Outlook

Filed Under: Drought Management, El Niño, Weather

Dr. Lander’s Rare Discovery in the Roots of Twin-leaf Senna

August 20, 2025 by jaime.sanford

It was a spring day in Schleicher County around 1985. Dr. Landers was waiting on students to finish a range contest when he decided to do a local rancher a small favor. Twin-leaf senna (Senna roemeriana) is a toxic plant known for causing livestock poisoning, and he had spotted a patch nearby. On a whim, he dug up about a dozen plants.

[Read more…] about Dr. Lander’s Rare Discovery in the Roots of Twin-leaf Senna

Filed Under: Plant ID, Staff

Grazing and Carbon: Finding the Balance

August 13, 2025 by jaime.sanford

When we think of livestock grazing, we often focus on the immediate impact on rangelands. But grazing can directly influence (good or bad) long-term organic material and carbon stored in soil. 2024 research published in Nature Climate Change highlights the critical role that grazing plays by analyzing global carbon stocks dynamics from 1,473 samples from across the world.

[Read more…] about Grazing and Carbon: Finding the Balance

Filed Under: Carbon Credits, Carbon Markets, Grazing Management

Indiana Prescribed Fire Entrapment – Incident Review

August 6, 2025 by jaime.sanford

On March 18, 2025, a routine prescribed fire at Indiana Dunes National Park turned into a serious safety incident when a firefighter sustained first and second‑degree facial burns, and a UTV caught fire during suppression efforts.

The team was tasked with burning a 10‑acre section just north of Long Lake, Indiana. Winds were at the upper limit of the prescription, but initial operations proceeded normally.

[Read more…] about Indiana Prescribed Fire Entrapment – Incident Review

Filed Under: Lessons Learned

Management & Microbes: How Fire and Grazing Shape Soil Life Below the Surface

July 30, 2025 by jaime.sanford

When we think about the effects of fire and grazing, we often focus on what’s visible—charred grasses, shifting plant communities, and changes in wildlife behavior. But just beneath our feet, a powerful shift is also happening. Fire and herbivory don’t just impact the surface—they reshape entire microbial communities within the soil, influencing how rangelands recover, grow, and function long after the flames cool off or the herd moves on.

[Read more…] about Management & Microbes: How Fire and Grazing Shape Soil Life Below the Surface

Filed Under: Soil

Beware of a New Invader in the Concho Valley: Jointed Goatgrass

July 23, 2025 by jaime.sanford

If you’ve noticed a wiry, unfamiliar grass growing along Texas roadsides—especially in the Edwards Plateau—you might be looking at Jointed Goatgrass (Aegilops cylindrica). This invasive cool-season annual, part of the Poaceae (Grass) family, is becoming an increasing concern for landowners, farmers, and rangeland managers across the Concho Valley region.

[Read more…] about Beware of a New Invader in the Concho Valley: Jointed Goatgrass

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Managing Cheatgrass on Texas Rangelands: Practical Strategies for Landowners

July 16, 2025 by jaime.sanford

Cheatgrass (Bromus tectorum) concerns in Texas may sound impossible, unfortunately, it is growing into a real concern in the Upper and Lower Rolling Plains. As an invasive annual grass, cheatgrass poses a serious threat to native ecosystems, forage quality, and wildfire risk— dominating landscapes into potential future monocultures. 

[Read more…] about Managing Cheatgrass on Texas Rangelands: Practical Strategies for Landowners

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Fire and Follow-through!

July 9, 2025 by jaime.sanford

We are so grateful to showcase the amazing work of our department’s graduate students in RWFM 621!  We worked with a devoted team of M.Sc. and Ph.D. students on developing a Communications Strategies and Extension Publication final project.  This team took on an exciting task of making new science readily available to ranchers, landowners, and prescribed fire practitioners.  Well done ya’ll and THANK YOU!!

For thousands of years, fire has played a vital role in shaping healthy grasslands across the Great Plains. From Indigenous communities using fire to manage hunting grounds to today’s producer striving for resiliency in rangeland pastures, prescribed fire continues to be a powerful process for rangeland stewardship. But as NEW research shows, it’s not just about the initial fire—it’s about timing, consistency, and PROCESS. 

[Read more…] about Fire and Follow-through!

Filed Under: Prescribed Burn Associations, Prescribed Burning, Publications

Bugs and Blades: The Overlooked Impact of Wind Energy on Insects

July 2, 2025 by jaime.sanford

When contemplating alternative energy, how often do rangeland managers and landowners think about bugs?  Believe it or not when thinking about systems and ecosystem services, it is important to pause and consider the unintended consequence of rangeland choices, especially for some of our most vital, yet vulnerable, creatures: insects.

[Read more…] about Bugs and Blades: The Overlooked Impact of Wind Energy on Insects

Filed Under: Wind

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Recent Posts

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