Methods for Growing Complete Feed for Livestock on the Forage Lands of West Kazakhstan in the Framework of Sustainable Management
- 1 Department of Agronomy, Zhangir Khan West Kazakhstan Agrarian and Technical University, Uralsk, Kazakhstan
- 2 College of Pasture Agriculture, Northwest A&F University, Yangling, Shaanxi, China
- 3 Saratov State University of Genetics, Biotechnology and Engineering named after N.I. Vavilov, Saratov, Russia
- 4 North Kazakhstan Research Institute of Agriculture LLP, Bishkul, Kyzylzhar District, North Kazakhstan Region, Kazakhstan
- 5 Kazakh National Agrarian Research University, Almaty, Kazakhstan
Abstract
Sustainable management of forage lands is critical for livestock productivity in the arid and semi-arid regions of West Kazakhstan, where pasture degradation and declining forage quality pose increasing challenges to agricultural sustainability. This study aimed to evaluate the effects of different grazing methods on the vegetation condition, productivity, and nutritional quality of pastures in West Kazakhstan. Pasture vegetation was assessed using parameters including projective cover, species composition, grass height, forage yield, digestible protein yield, and metabolizable energy output. Three grazing systems were compared: rotational grazing, continuous grazing, and ungrazed control plots. Results demonstrated that biometric indicators, productivity, and forage quality were significantly influenced by the grazing method applied. Rotational grazing produced the most favorable pasture parameters, with forage yields of 0.60–0.75 t/ha of fodder units, digestible protein yields of 0.11–0.15 t/ha, and metabolizable energy outputs of 1.54–2.03 GJ/ha. A statistically significant dependence of pasture yield on grass height and projective vegetation cover was confirmed (p < 0.001). These findings demonstrate that rotational grazing represents the most effective strategy for maintaining forage quality and pasture productivity under the conditions of West Kazakhstan, and provide a practical framework for sustainable forage land management applicable to regions with similar semi-arid pastoral systems.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.3844/ojbsci.2026.26.01.024
Copyright: © 2026 Beybit Nasiyev, Peizhi Yang, Azhar Latenova, Marat Ongayev, Nurbolat Zhanatalapov, Askhat Bekkaliyev, Madiyar Khiyasov, Аskhat Okshebayev, Aidyn Bekkaliyeva, Vladimir Shibaikin, Zhibek Nokusheva, Tursunay Vassilina and Aigerim Khairush. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the
Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
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Keywords
- Rotational grazing
- Forage quality
- Pasture productivity
- Metabolizable energy
- Digestible protein
- Projective cover
- Sustainable land management
- West Kazakhstan