ADAPTATION AND COMPLEMENTARITY OF DIGITARIA-ERIANTHA AND MEDICAGO-SATIVA ON A SOLODIC SOIL IN A SUBHUMID ENVIRONMENT WITH SUMMER AND WINTERRAINFALL

Citation
Pg. Tow et al., ADAPTATION AND COMPLEMENTARITY OF DIGITARIA-ERIANTHA AND MEDICAGO-SATIVA ON A SOLODIC SOIL IN A SUBHUMID ENVIRONMENT WITH SUMMER AND WINTERRAINFALL, Australian journal of experimental agriculture, 37(3), 1997, pp. 311-322
Citations number
52
Categorie Soggetti
Agriculture Dairy & AnumalScience",Agriculture
ISSN journal
08161089
Volume
37
Issue
3
Year of publication
1997
Pages
311 - 322
Database
ISI
SICI code
0816-1089(1997)37:3<311:AACODA>2.0.ZU;2-V
Abstract
A cutting experiment was conducted over 4 years on a solodic soil on t he Far North-West Slopes of New South Wales to compare the environment al adaptation of Digitaria eriantha ssp. eriantha cv. Premier and Medi cago sativa cv. Hunter River. Adaptation was tested by comparing seaso nal yield responses of the monocultures and the mixture at high and lo w levels of nitrogen (N); monoculture yields were also compared with t hose predicted by a simple climate-based model. When N was non-limitin g, digitaria yields were highest in summer while lucerne yields were h ighest in spring. Lucerne yields in summer were often much lower than those predicted by the model but the plant recovered well during perio ds of milder temperature, until decimated by flooding. Yields of the m ixture were similar to those of digitaria in summer when it was grass dominant, and similar to lucerne in spring when it was legume dominant . Overall, at high N the mixture did not outyield digitaria. In the ab sence of fertiliser N, digitaria and lucerne monocultures gave similar dry matter yields. However, over the 3 warm seasons, the mixture prod uced 72% more dry matter than the monocultures and 263% (325 kg/ha) mo re N than digitaria. The complementary seasonal responses of digitaria and lucerne, and high yields of the mixture suggest a role for the mi xture on solodic soils on the Far North-West Slopes of New South Wales provided the effects of irregular flooding on lucerne can be minimise d by management or more tolerant cultivars.