How hundreds of hungry cows are working to restore the Great Salt Lake's shoreline

4 months ago 5

SALT LAKE CITY (ABC4) -- Many methods to save the Great Salt Lake have been introduced since 2022, when water levels hit record lows, but one potential solution involves hundreds of hungry cows.

The idea is that the ungulates will eat up phragmites, an invasive plant that has essentially taken over the lake’s wetlands. Not only do phragmites suck up critical water before it reaches the lake, the plant chokes out native species and animal habitat. It’s also an enormous fire hazard.

‘Planting parties’ helping native plants get a foothold on Utah Lake’s shores

To combat phragmites, The Nature Conservancy is teaming up with ranchers to place hundreds of cows on parts of the shoreline owned by the environmental organization.

“Hopefully, sometime, the cows will just work themselves out of a job, they’ll eat all the phragmites down and we’ll get kind of a better handle on it,” said Chris Brown, director of stewardship with The Nature Conservancy.

Currently, the cows are being placed in areas overrun with phragmites. Sin...

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