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Society for Range Management Selects Moseley for Oklahoma Section Board of Directors

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ARDMORE, Okla. — Noble Research Institute wildlife and fisheries consultant Will Moseley has been selected to serve on Society for Range Management (SRM) Oklahoma Section Boards of Directors. He will serve for three years.

“This is quite an accomplishment for Will,” said Hugh Aljoe, Noble Research Institute producer relations director. “It’s a testament to his professionalism and the respect his peers have for him. He is a knowledgeable advocate for rangeland management issues and is effective in communicating those issues to producers and others in the agriculture industry.”

Moseley joined the Noble Research Institute in 2008. He is passionate about helping producers manage their resources for the benefit of both wildlife and people. Moseley is interested in prescribed fire, white-tailed deer management, waterfowl management, plant identification and fisheries management among many other topics.

The Society for Range Management is dedicated to supporting people who work with rangelands and have a commitment to the sustainable use, conservation and management of rangelands for the benefit of current societies and future generations.

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Will MoseleyNoble Research Institute wildlife and fisheries consultant Will Moseley was elected to the Society for Range Management Oklahoma section board of directors.

Noble Research Institute, LLC (www.noble.org) is an independent nonprofit agricultural research organization dedicated to delivering solutions to great agricultural challenges. Headquartered in Ardmore, Oklahoma, Noble’s goal is to achieve land stewardship for improved soil health in grazing animal production with lasting producer profitability. Achievement of this goal will be measured by farmers and ranchers profitably regenerating hundreds of millions of acres of U.S. grazing lands. Noble aims to remove, mitigate or help producers avoid the barriers that deter the lasting use of regenerative, profitable land management practices in grazing animal production.

Researchers, consultants, educators and ranch staff work together to give farmers and ranchers the skills and tools to regenerate the land in a profitable manner. Noble researchers and educators seek and deliver answers to producer questions concerning regenerative management of pasture and range environments, wildlife, pecan production, and livestock production. Regenerative management recognizes that each decision made on the ranch impacts the interactions of the soil, plants, water, animals and producers. Noble’s 14,000 acres of working ranch lands provide a living laboratory on which to demonstrate and practice regenerative principles and ideas to deliver value to farmers and ranchers across the U.S.

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