David C. Ganskopp

Rangeland Scientist
U.S. Department of Agriculture, ARS
Livestock Grazing Behavior

Dr. Ganskopp is a Rangeland Scientist employed by the U.S. Department of Agriculture, Agriculture Research Service at Burns, Oregon. He received his BS (1974) in Wildlife Management from West Virginia University and MS (1979) and PhD (1983) degrees in Rangeland Management from Oregon State University. He has been with the research group at the Eastern Oregon Agricultural Research Center since 1982.

His current research is focused on two themes; 1) factors influencing livestock grazing behavior and distribution, and 2) prescription livestock grazing. Present studies on livestock grazing behavior are employing GPS collars to quantify beef cattle use of large pastures and their responses to management activities aimed at altering their spatial patterns of use. Prescription grazing projects are investigating the controlled use of beef cattle foraging to alter the character, forage composition, and/or forage quality of rangelands.

 

 

The KRESS Modeler was developed by the KRESS Project, Department of Rangeland Ecology and Management, Oregon State University, and Department of Agronomy and Range Science University of California/Davis. The KRESS Modeler is copyrighted.