The Rangelands Roundtable has developed varied research, expanding projects, spanning social, ecological, and economic components, as well as their integration. Current efforts explore soil health a foundation for rangeland systems that provide ecosystem goods and service to society today, while also emphasizing conservation practices to ensure availability of these benefits for future generations. Other ongoing projects: explore efficacy of conservation programs from participant perspectives; economics of implementing conservation practices, such as those available for sage grouse habitat management; evaluate trade-offs among conventional and innovative energy production strategies; and outline monitoring to track management changes to improve resilience to climate change. Interactions among social, economic, and ecological information is a basic tenet of the conceptual framework RR created to illustrate these associations and interaction pathways. Ensuring that projects provide accessible information to assist ranchers is key, since two-thirds of of rangelands are privately owned and managed; the Ranch Management Guidebook offers a self-paced assessment to aid in identifying focal areas for future efforts. Engaging ranchers and other end-users in co-development of research projects is also critical to addressing management and policy questions, and recent projects grounded in such concepts of usable science have highlighted these linkages. Project publications, posters, presentations, and other informational materials are linked on this page.

Current Projects

 

Climate Change Adaptation & Resilience

Rangeland Ecosystem Goods & Service

Sage Grouse Conservation and Economics