Author:
Ayres J. F.,Dicker R. W.,McPhee M. J.,Turner A. D.,Murison R. D.,Kamphorst P. G.
Abstract
This paper describes the botanical components, seasonal herbage mass, and
nutritive value of pastures used for post-weaning growth of CRC cattle at Glen
Innes before their progression to subsequent finishing and meat quality
studies. The pastures under study comprised introduced temperate perennial
species (tall fescue, Festuca arundinacea; phalaris,
Phalaris aquatica; perennial ryegrass,
Lolium perenne;
cocksfoot,Dactylis glomerata; white clover,
Trifolium repens; and red clover,
Trifolium pratense) grazed by yearling cattle and
managed according to local practice to maintain herbage mass between
pre-determined limits. The study took place on 3 adjacent pasture systems (P1,
pasture only; P2, pasture plus formulated pellets fed in later
winter–early spring; P3, pasture plus forage crop grazed in later
winter–early spring) over the 3 years 1994–96 that included a
severe 20-month drought event followed by a drought-recovery phase. Results
are discussed in the context of the pasture feed year which was shown to
comprise 3 distinct phases: (i) spring primary growth phase, high availability
of green herbage mass (2500–4500 kg DM/ha) of very high
digestibility (0.80–0.85) and very high N status (about 30 g N/kg
DM); (ii) summer–autumn secondary regrowth, high availability of green
herbage mass (2500–4000 kg DM/ha) but with only moderate nutritive
value (0.65–0.70 digestibility, 15–20 g N/kg DM); and (iii)
winter dormancy, low availability of green herbage mass (750–1500 kg
DM/ha) but with high nutritive value (0.75–0.80 digestibility,
20–30 g N/kg DM). It was concluded that the limitations of the feed
year for yearling cattle in this environment include a feed gap in
winter–early spring due to low herbage mass associated with winter cold
and a feed gap in summer–autumn associated with moderate nutritive value
of secondary regrowth pasture.
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Cited by
10 articles.
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