Author:
Greenwood K. L.,MacLeod D. A.,Hutchinson K. J.
Abstract
Summary. The effects of sheep stocking rate on soil
physical properties were investigated in a long-term (>30-year-old) grazing
trial on the Northern Tablelands of New South Wales. The soil physical
properties studied were unsaturated hydraulic conductivity, soil strength and
bulk density. Significant differences between the ungrazed and grazed pastures
were found for all soil physical measurements. Compaction by sheep was limited
to the upper 5 cm of the soil profile and resulted in lower porosity, mainly
due to loss of pores larger than 1.2 mm equivalent diameter.
However, after 30 years, the pastures grazed at 10, 15 and 20 sheep/ha had
similar soil physical properties. Soil physical properties appear to be
relatively insensitive to stocking rate in the long term and therefore other
factors, such as maintenance of pasture cover, should be given a higher
priority in grazing management decisions.
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Cited by
74 articles.
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