ESTIMATES OF SEASONAL NITROGEN-FIXATION OF ANNUAL SUBTERRANEAN CLOVER-BASED PASTURES USING THE N-15 NATURAL-ABUNDANCE TECHNIQUE

Citation
Tp. Bolger et al., ESTIMATES OF SEASONAL NITROGEN-FIXATION OF ANNUAL SUBTERRANEAN CLOVER-BASED PASTURES USING THE N-15 NATURAL-ABUNDANCE TECHNIQUE, Plant and soil, 175(1), 1995, pp. 57-66
Citations number
23
Categorie Soggetti
Agriculture Soil Science","Plant Sciences",Agriculture
Journal title
ISSN journal
0032079X
Volume
175
Issue
1
Year of publication
1995
Pages
57 - 66
Database
ISI
SICI code
0032-079X(1995)175:1<57:EOSNOA>2.0.ZU;2-G
Abstract
Annual pasture legumes play a key role in ley farming systems of south ern Australia, providing biologically fixed nitrogen (N) to drive the production of the pastures as well as subsequent crops grown in rotati on. Seasonal inputs of biologically fixed N in shoot biomass of the su bterranean clover (Trifolium subterraneum) component of grazed annual pastures were assessed using the N-15 natural abundance technique and appropriately timed sampling of herbage dry matter (DM) for N accumula tion. AL three study sites spanning a gradient across the Western Aust ralian wheatbelt from 300 to 600 mm annual rainfall the performance of the clover and non-legume herbs and grasses was examined as paired co mparisons involving two management treatments expected to give contras ting effects on pasture productivity, botanical composition and N-2 fi xation. The proportion of clover N derived from atmospheric N-2 fixati on (%Ndfa) ranged from 65 to 95% across sites, treatments and sampling times. Amounts of fixed N accumulated in clover shoot biomass ranged from 50 to 125 kg ha(-1), and paralleled trends in clover production. Substantial increases in pasture production in high yielding treatment s generally occurred without decrease in %Ndfa, suggesting that N-2 fi xation was essentially non-limiting to performance of the clover compo nent. Seasonal profiles for accumulation of fixed N were skewed toward s the late winter and spring period, particularly in low plant density pastures following a cereal crop. There were seasonal, site and treat ment-specific effects on the proportion of clover and non-legume pastu re components and consequently clover yield and N-2 fixation were vari ably affected by competition from non-legume species.