Pre-Contact,
Aboriginal and First Nations
Bison play role in
regenerative agriculture
By Miranda Leybourne
Branon Sun
October 8, 2022
A Pierson-area bison ranch and grain farm is using
regenerative agricultural practices to protect the environment and help
its herd flourish.
https://www.brandonsun.com/westman-this-week/2022/09/29/bison-play-role-in-regenerative-agriculture
A
Pierson-area bison ranch and grain farm
is using regenerative agricultural practices to protect the environment
and help its herd flourish.
Brooks and Jen White, owners of Borderland Agriculture, located near
the community of Pierson, brought bison back to their family farm 20
years ago.
“My project on the farm was to bring livestock in, and I chose to use
bison,” Brooks White said.
Long before that, in 1882, Richard and Lorina White homesteaded the
area, which was dominated at the time by sandy soils and a sea of mixed
grass prairie, where bison herds roamed free. Just 12 years before
that, in 1870, Manitoba had joined Confederation with the Great Plains
bison on the provincial seal. But by 1888, no wild bison were left in
Canada, and the animals that once supported Indigenous communities and
the Great Plains grassland ecosystem were nowhere to be seen.
Now, through a grant from the Manitoba Habitat Heritage Corporation
(MHHC), the Whites are making the most of their bison herd’s role in
regenerative agriculture.
Each year, MHHC invites applications for grants through the province’s
Conservation Trust for on-the-ground projects throughout Manitoba that
benefit water quantity and quality, wildlife habitat, soil health and
nature.
The Manitoba Forage and Grasslands Association (MFGA) applied for the
grant in 2020, with the Whites named as the farmers who would implement
the project, which sought to convert 160 acres of grainland to a
grazing system. By doing so, they wanted to demonstrate how
regenerative agricultural practices can improve economic returns to
producers while also providing water storage, improved soil health and
increased wildlife habitat.
The project was a natural fit, Brooks White said, since not all
grainland is always suitable to be farmed as cropland. There were a few
areas where the Whites’ grain farm encroached on riparian zones —
strips of moisture-loving vegetation growing along the edge of a
natural water body — and putting crops on those areas added more stress
to the environment and led to fewer productive crops, White said.
“They were better suited to be put back into grass, like they probably
always should have been.”
Having always been focused on poly-cropping — the practice of planting
several kinds of crop species on the same piece of land at the same
time — the project allowed the Whites to seed 160 acres to a perennial
pasture, which they then fenced and added a watering system to,
installing structure to back-flood areas in the spring to encourage
water infiltration and reduce field runoff to prevent downstream
flooding.
“The No. 1 [priority] for us when you’re going to seed down grass and
turn it into pasture is making sure there’s water there for the
animals,” White explained.
Luckily, an existing source was within range of the new pasture, so a
pipeline was run below frost-level so water could be brought into the
area year round.
Having their herd of bison be able to graze in the area is the key to
building soil and improving plant health, White said. The Whites rotate
bison and domestic livestock across the farm, where they graze on a
variety of forages, perennial pasture, cover crops, crop residue and
corn.
Bison, which are physically adapted to winter grazing, produce manure
and trample the soil, and that in turn helps to spread nutrients. White
said this has helped the farm reduce their fertilizer costs by 75 per
cent.
“By maintaining plant cover and moving [the bison] through the farm
year round, we are essentially mimicking the ecological system when the
bison roamed the Great Plains,” White said.
This regenerative agriculture approach has paid off in changes to the
farm’s soil. In fields where the transition was made from annual
cropping to grazed perennial pastures, Jen White said she is seeing
“significant” changes in dung beetles and earth works in the soil,
increased plant production and better water infiltration.
An array of wildlife, from moose and deer to waterfowl, have also
visited the farm due to its improved habitat. Since one of the
project’s goals was to improve the natural ecosystem for wildlife in
the summer months, while stockpiling forage for the bison to graze on
in the winter months, seeing a variety of animals on his property has
given Brooks White a feeling of success.
It’s important to try to look after what we have, and to us it’s a
signal that our farm is moving in the right direction when we see
wildlife coming to our farm.”
Seeing bison making a comeback on the Prairies is a positive thing,
said Meghan Thomson, Manitoba Habitat Heritage Corporation trusts
program manager.
“They’re considered a keystone species in the way ecology works. They
provided a lot of benefits in the way that they would graze the grass,
which impacted soil health,” Thomson explained. “It’s great to get them
back on the landscape to get those historical ecosystems working again.”
The Whites have shown, through the project and their regular farming
practices, that they are “outstanding stewards of nature” and of
healthy lands, said Duncan Morrison, MFGA’s executive director.
“There’s a whole demographic of farmers that are looking at the
principles of regenerative agriculture, especially around soil health.
That is what a lot of farmers, such as the Whites … are pushing for.
It’s a really good thing.”
White said that while a lot of his peers are also interested in
regenerative agriculture, the mainstream farming world still needs to
do more for the environment. One way the average person can help is by
supporting businesses like Borderland Agriculture that sell meat and
other products that were grown and raised using regenerative
agriculture practices.
“The No. 1 thing that will drive change is when people start to want
their food produced by regenerative ag practices,” White said.
In addition to Conservation Trust funding, the MFGA Borderland
Agriculture project was also supported by Ducks Unlimited Canada, the
Souris River Watershed District and Manitoba Agriculture-Ag Action
along with significant cash and in-kind contributions from the Whites.
Pierson is located 160 kilometres southwest of Brandon.
» mleybourne@brandonsun.com
» Twitter: @miraleybourne
|
|