WACD Reading List

#AGRICULTURE #WATER
Virtual fencing technology improves grazing and water quality | Morning Ag Clips
Virtual fencing technology improves grazing and water quality | Morning Ag Clips
STILLWATER, Okla. — Oklahoma State University researchers have received funding from the Environmental Protection Agency to examine how virtual fencing technology could improve the water quality and ecosystems of cattle grazing lands. The new EPA grant totaling more than $800,000 supports research on how GPS-enabled collars worn by cattle can help producers not only better manage grazing, but also improve water quality and other natural resources, such as wildlife habitat and soil health.
·morningagclips.com·
Virtual fencing technology improves grazing and water quality | Morning Ag Clips
Looming battle: NW Washington farmers brace for water-right lawsuit that Ecology is preparing | Water | capitalpress.com
Looming battle: NW Washington farmers brace for water-right lawsuit that Ecology is preparing | Water | capitalpress.com
WHATCOM COUNTY, Wash. — At the request of two tribes, the Washington Department of Ecology plans to sue water users in Whatcom County, raising the possibility of severely curtailing irrigation in Western Washington’s top farm region. Salmon need more water, the tribes say. Receptive to that, Ecology invokes equity, climate change and environmental justice to justify the adjudication, in which a local judge will sort out the region’s water rights.
·capitalpress.com·
Looming battle: NW Washington farmers brace for water-right lawsuit that Ecology is preparing | Water | capitalpress.com