grazeland

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English

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Etymology

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From graze +‎ land.

Noun

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grazeland (countable and uncountable, plural grazelands)

  1. Land used for grazing animals; pasture.
    • 1960, Susan B.G. Ofori-Atta, “Nutritional Deficiencies and Maternal and Child Health in Africa”, in Journal of the National Medical Association, volume 52, number 1:
      Ghana is an agricultural country consisting mainly of the coastal plains with grazeland vegetation, a forest belt covering a large part of the South and Ashanti, and the Savannah in the North.
    • 1996, Jean-Marie Baland, Jean-Philippe Platteau, Halting Degradation of Natural Resources: Is There a Role for Rural Communities?[1], →OCLC:
      For instance, one could think of parcelling out the entire grazeland into small, appropriately scattered pastures
    • 1997, Relocatable Over the Horizon Radar (ROTHR) System: Environmental Impact Statement[2]:
      The dense grassland south of the dirt road and north of Laguna Playa Grande and the identified lowland forest is the current habitat in succession from what had previously been grazeland and historically been in sugarcane production.
    • 2005, Don Melnick, Jeffrey Sachs, UN Millennium Project. Task Force on Environmental Sustainability, UN Millennium Project: Environment and human well-being[3], Earthscan, →OCLC, page 42:
      Land-based production systems — crop, orchard, plantation, grazeland, and freshwater aquaculture — claim almost one-third of the Earth's terrestrial surface
    • 2005, A. Georgoudis, A. Rosati, C. Mosconi, Animal Production and Natural Resources Utilisation in the Mediterranean Mountain Areas, Wageningen Academic Publishers, →OCLC:
      Rangelands consist of grazelands, shrublands and forest ranges. Grazelands are mainly natural, of low quality and are grazed, in most cases, throughout the year.