Author:
FOTHERGILL M.,DAVIES D. A.,DANIEL G. J.
Abstract
Although there has been some recent interest in the morphology
of
individual white clover plants
within established mixed swards under sheep grazing, there is little
information available on the
morphological changes taking place during the critical first 3 years of
sward development.
Undamaged white clover plants were sampled from an experiment at Plas
Gogerddan, Ceredigion,
comparing three contrasting white clover cultivars, sown with a common
companion ryegrass
cultivar, under continuous stocking with sheep. Turves (250 × 250
mm),
from which individual plants
were carefully extracted, were taken every month during 1990–91
(years 2 and 3 after sowing). Each
plant was described in detail by assessing a range of morphological
characters. Information was also
gathered from each quadrat on the degree of flowering and seedling recruitment.
There were clear
seasonal variations in plant size and complexity with an increase in the
number of simple, unbranched
plants over the winter/spring period, which became the dominant plant
type by June. During the later
part of each year, the reverse was true. Characters associated with plant
size also decreased over the
winter period, followed by recovery during the ensuing summer. However
the
recovery was not
complete and there was a strong general trend towards an increased proportion
of less complex plants
of reduced size over the 2 years. As plant size fell, plant number increased
and morphological
differences between cultivars diminished. By autumn of the second year
(third year after sowing) the
mean plant size reached a critical level with further stolon loss resulting
in large scale plant death.
Over the 2-month period August–October 1991, plant number fell by
60% and resulted in a reduction
in stolon abundance of 76%; a true clover crash. The seedling data also
suggest that under these
conditions seedling recruitment can be up to one twentieth of that expected
from a conventional
sowing and can play a substantial role in the regeneration of the sward.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Genetics,Agronomy and Crop Science,Animal Science and Zoology
Cited by
20 articles.
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