Author:
Waller R. A.,Sale P. W. G.,Saul G. R.,Kearney G. A.
Abstract
A 4-year grazing experiment was carried out in south-western Victoria to
compare the effect of tactical stocking with continuous stocking on the
persistence of perennial ryegrass (Lolium perenne L.)
and the productivity of sheep used for prime lamb production. Tactical
stocking consisted of variable length summer, autumn and winter rotations and
continuous stocking in spring. The 2 grazing strategies were compared on 2
contrasting pastures: an upgraded pasture, sown with newer cultivars of
perennial ryegrass and subterranean clover
(Trifolium subterraneum L.) with 26 kg
phosphorus/ha.year, and a naturalised perennial ryegrass pasture receiving
6 kg phosphorus/ha.year. Paddocks were grazed by Border Leicester x Merino
ewes, which were mated to a terminal sire to lamb in September. In this final
paper of the series, the effects of the grazing systems and pasture treatments
on animal production and herbage quality are presented.
The liveweights of the ewes were similar across all treatments during autumn
and winter, but the tactically stocked ewes were 3–6 kg lighter than
continuously stocked ewes during spring and summer. The lower liveweight was
attributed to the lower (P<0.001) herbage quality on
the tactically stocked pastures in spring (P<0.001).
Both digestibility and crude protein concentration were about 4 percentage
units lower with tactical stocking in spring. This lower quality was
associated with the higher herbage mass (by 500–900 kg dry
matter/ha) on the tactically stocked pastures, which presumably had a
higher stem:leaf ratio and showed reproductive growth earlier than the
continuously stocked pastures. Although there were differences in ewe
liveweight, this did not affect individual lamb weaning weight or ewe fleece
weight. There were significant increases in production per hectare from
tactically stocked or upgraded pasture treatments due to the higher stocking
rates that could be carried, 9 and 51%, respectively. In 1998, 544
kilograms of lamb per hectare was weaned from continuously stocked paddocks
and 607 kg/ha from tactically stocked paddocks
(P<0.05), and 449 and 702 kg/ha from the typical
and upgraded pastures, respectively.
This study reinforces the view that soil fertility and pasture improvement
have a much greater impact on animal productivity than changes to grazing
method with little effect on per head productivity. The negative impact of
rotational stocking on herbage quality reinforces the need to use these
systems strategically when benefits from increased herbage mass are expected
to increase animal production or overcome sustainability or pasture
persistence problems.
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Cited by
12 articles.
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