PERMANENT PASTURES ON A BRIGALOW SOIL - THE EFFECT OF NITROGEN-FERTILIZER AND STOCKING RATE ON PASTURES AND LIVEWEIGHT GAIN

Citation
Rm. Jones et al., PERMANENT PASTURES ON A BRIGALOW SOIL - THE EFFECT OF NITROGEN-FERTILIZER AND STOCKING RATE ON PASTURES AND LIVEWEIGHT GAIN, Tropical grasslands, 29(4), 1995, pp. 193-209
Citations number
31
Categorie Soggetti
Agriculture,"Agriculture Dairy & AnumalScience
Journal title
ISSN journal
00494763
Volume
29
Issue
4
Year of publication
1995
Pages
193 - 209
Database
ISI
SICI code
0049-4763(1995)29:4<193:PPOABS>2.0.ZU;2-D
Abstract
This paper reports changes in pasture and animal productivity during t he second phase of a grazing experiment established in 1968 on a ferti le brigalow soil in subtropical south-east Queensland. The objective w as to see how fertiliser application and stocking rate affected the gr adual decline in productivity, or run-down, of pastures established on a cultivated brigalow soil. The sown pastures were a mixture of green panic (Panicum maximum var. trichoglume cv. Petrie) and rhodes grass (Chloris gayana cv. Pioneer). The treatments applied were: with and wi thout superphosphate (187 kg/ha/yr); with and without N fertiliser (10 0 kg/ha/yr N); and 5 stocking rates ranging from 1.0-2.2 yearling stee rs or heifers/ha. The complete experiment ran from 1973-1985 and a res tricted subset of treatments from 1985-1993, although no more N fertil iser was applied after 1985. Superphosphate application had no effect on pasture or animal production. For the first 3 years, all pastures w ere dominated by green panic and there was no effect of N fertiliser o n liveweight gain. Over the next 3 years, there was a marked decline i n the proportion of green panic in pastures receiving no N fertiliser and stocked at above 1 hd/ha. Concurrently, liveweight gain declined w ith increasing stocking rate on the unfertilised pastures and carcase quality was higher on the fertilised pastures. N application on pastur es stocked at 2 hd/ha produced 1.1 kg liveweight gain per kg N. The hi ghest stocking rate of 2.2 hd/ha was discontinued in 1982, as it could not be maintained in dry years, even with N fertiliser. In 1985, gree n panic remained dominant in the N-fertilised pastures at all stocking rates from 1.0-2.0 hd/ha, but only at the lightest stocking rate in t he unfertilised pastures, The effect of stocking rate on liveweight ga in pet head from N-fertilised pastures remained similar to that record ed at the start of the experiment in 1973. In contrast, there was a 3- fold greater decline per unit increase in stocking rate on the unferti lised pastures, Even after N fertilisation ceased in 1985, green panic dominated the lightly grazed and previously N-fertilised treatments u ntil 1992, and liveweight gain was significantly higher in the previou sly fertilised pastures in 4 of the 8 years. Thus, on this fertile soi l, run-down could be alleviated by using a low stocking rate, which en abled pasture composition and animal production to be maintained for m ore than 20 years following pasture establishment. At higher stocking rates, run-down could be averted by application of N fertiliser.