THE EFFECTS OF MANAGEMENT AND PLANT VARIETY ON THE COMPOSITION, VERTICAL STRUCTURE AND STOCK-CARRYING CAPACITY OF LOLIUM-PERENNE TRIFOLIUM-REPENS PASTURES

Citation
Gt. Barthram et Sa. Grant, THE EFFECTS OF MANAGEMENT AND PLANT VARIETY ON THE COMPOSITION, VERTICAL STRUCTURE AND STOCK-CARRYING CAPACITY OF LOLIUM-PERENNE TRIFOLIUM-REPENS PASTURES, Grass and forage science, 49(3), 1994, pp. 360-368
Citations number
23
Categorie Soggetti
Plant Sciences",Agriculture
Journal title
ISSN journal
01425242
Volume
49
Issue
3
Year of publication
1994
Pages
360 - 368
Database
ISI
SICI code
0142-5242(1994)49:3<360:TEOMAP>2.0.ZU;2-E
Abstract
The effects of sheep grazing, with or without a 7-week rest period bef ore ear emergence, on species balance in four perennial ryegrass/white clover swards were assessed. Swards of an early (Aurora) or a late (M elle) flowering ryegrass were grown with either a small-leaved (Kent) or a medium-leaved (Milkanova) clover. The clover lamina, expressed as a proportion of the total lamina mass, was greater with Kent than Mil kanova. This proportion was not changed by resting the Aurora (earlier rest) swards, but was increased by resting the Melle (later rest) swa rds. A greater proportion of the clover lamina mass was near the top o f the canopy in the Milkanova than in the Kent swards, and during the summer than in spring or autumn. The densities of clover growing point s were greater in the Kent than the Milkanova swards and were increase d by the late rest period. This effect persisted over the winter. Stoc king density was higher on the Kent than the Milkanova swards. The eff ects of the two rest periods, and the variety combinations, on pasture composition are interpreted as being principally a result of the diff erences in temperature between the earlier and later rest periods and of the different relationships between temperature and the growth of r yegrass and clover. Varietal characteristics, such as the vertical dis tribution of laminae, were also shown to be important.