Author:
Cayley J. W. D.,Hannah M. C.,Kearney G. A.,Clark S. G.
Abstract
The response of pastures based on Lolium perenne L. and
Trifolium subterraneum L. to single superphosphate was
assessed at Hamilton, Victoria, by measuring the growth of pastures during
winter, spring, and summer over 7 years from 1979 to 1987. The seasons were
defined by the pattern of pasture production, rather than by calendar months.
Winter was the period of constant growth rate following the autumn rain;
spring was the period of accelerating growth rate until growth rate changed
abruptly following the onset of dry summer weather. Pastures were grazed with
sheep at a low, medium, or high grazing pressure, corresponding generally to
stocking rates of 10, 14, or 18 sheep/ha. At each level of grazing
pressure, single superphosphate was applied at 5 rates from 1979 to 1982; the
highest rate, expressed as elemental phosphorus (P), was reduced from 100 to
40 kg/ha during this time. In addition there was an unfertilised
treatment. In 1984, fertiliser was applied at 6 rates from 4 to 40 kg
P/ha. No fertiliser was applied in the remaining years, including 1983.
Pasture production was measured from 1979 to 1982 and from 1985 to 1987.
Total pasture dry matter (DM) accumulation per year at the highest stocking
rate was less than the other treatments in 4 of the years. Averaged over all
years and fertiliser treatments, the annual net production was 10·1,
10·1, and 9·0 t DM/ha (P <
0·05) for plots grazed at low, medium, and high stocking rates,
respectively. The amount of fertiliser required to reach a given proportion of
maximum yield response did not vary between winter and spring in any year, but
the greater potential yield in spring (P < 0
·001) meant that as more fertiliser was applied, the disparity between
pasture grown in winter and pasture grown in spring increased. Differences in
this disparity between extreme levels of P ranged from 1·4 t DM/ha
in a drought to about 7 t DM/ha in a good season.
The implications for managing farms when pastures are fertilised at higher
rates than currently practised by district farmers are that systems of animal
production with a requirement for plentiful good quality pasture in spring,
such as ewes lambing in spring, should be used. The benefit of spring lambing
over autumn lambing was supported when the 2 systems were compared over 26
years using the GrassGro decision support system. Well fertilised pasture
systems will also allow more scope for conserving pasture as hay or silage,
and increase opportunities for diversification in the farming enterprise, such
as spring-growing crops.
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences