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    <title>ronnie stauffer</title>
    <link>https://universe.byu.edu/ronnie-stauffer</link>
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    <language>en-US</language>
    <lastBuildDate>Wed, 25 Feb 2026 17:49:38 GMT</lastBuildDate>
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      <title>BYU's rangeland management team wins Trail Boss award</title>
      <link>https://universe.byu.edu/campus/byus-rangeland-management-team-wins-the-trail-boss-award</link>
      <description>At Brigham Young University's Life Sciences Building, students and faculty on the rangeland management team have been studying rangelands for years. Rangelands include deserts, grasslands, shrublands and woodlands.</description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 25 Feb 2026 17:49:38 GMT</pubDate>
      <author>Ellie Haverlock</author>
      <guid>https://universe.byu.edu/campus/byus-rangeland-management-team-wins-the-trail-boss-award</guid>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<html lang="en">                    <head>                <meta charset="utf-8">                <meta property="op:markup_version" content="v1.0">                                    <link rel="canonical" href="https://universe.byu.edu/campus/byus-rangeland-management-team-wins-the-trail-boss-award">                                <meta property="fb:article_style" content="default">            </head>                            <body>                <article>                    <header>                                                                            <h1>BYU&#x27;s rangeland management team wins Trail Boss award</h1>                                                                            <h3 class="op-kicker">ronnie stauffer,samuel leigh,byu rangeland management team,plants,animals,Featured</h3>                                                                            <address>    <a rel="author" href="https://universe.byu.edu/ellie-haverlock">        Ellie Haverlock    </a></address>                                                                            <time class="op-published" dateTime="February 25, 10:49 AM">February 25, 10:49 AM</time>                                                                            <time class="op-modified" dateTime="February 25, 05:44 PM">February 25, 05:44 PM</time>                                            </header>                    <figure class="op-interactive"> <iframe src="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ISrB5Jgfgyo" width="560" height="315"></iframe></figure><p>At Brigham Young University's Life Sciences Building, students and faculty on the rangeland management team have been studying rangelands for years. Rangelands include deserts, grasslands, shrublands and woodlands.</p><p>The main two things we do are a lot of plant ID, so learning to identify plants, and also just management principles, what are different range types and how do we take care of them, said Ronnie Stauffer, a member of the rangeland management team.</p><p>At the Society for Range Management annual meeting, dozens of teams across North America competed, shared research and networked with professionals.</p><p>This year, BYUs team won the honored Trail Boss award, which marked their fifth straight victory and sixth overall.</p><p>So the Trail Boss is essentially an accumulation of all the competitions based on teams on who did the best, Stauffer said.</p><p>This year the team traveled to Monterey, California, to compete. Team member Samuel Leigh said he enjoyed identifying plants and rangelands in places hes never been before.</p><p>California was just beautiful. We got the chance to walk along the seashore, saw the Pacific Ocean for the first time in my life, which was pretty cool, Leigh said.</p><p>Not only did the team get to experience new places, they also got to learn from many people who are different from them.</p><p>Its a very, I feel like, ideologically diverse field, and so it helps you get a lot of different perspectives on things and theres just so much that you can learn, Stauffer said.</p><p>Despite their many differences, everyone had the same goal: to help save and preserve the rangelands around us so that plants, animals and people alike can enjoy nature for as long as possible.</p><p>We have enough for everyone, but if everyone takes too much, we don't have enough for anybody, Leigh said.</p><p>For more information about the BYU rangeland management team and the Trail Boss award, visit the teams <a href="https://lifesciences.byu.edu/trail-boss-champions-byu-range-management-team-takes-top-spots-at-annual-srm-meeting" target="_blank">website.</a></p>                                    </article>            <script src="https://brightspotcdn.byu.edu/resource/00000173-da06-d043-a7ff-dece7d790000/_resource/brightspot/analytics/search/SiteSearchAnalytics.5eb1a8a326b06970c71b3a253fbeaa64.gz.js" data-bsp-contentid="0000019c-8bc6-d9b2-a39c-cbce36f20000"></script></body>            </html>]]></content:encoded>
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