Author:
Scott J. M.,Hutchinson K. J.,King K.,Chen W.,McLeod M.,Blair G. J.,White A.,Wilkinson D.,Lefroy R. D. B.,Cresswell H.,Daniel H.,Harris C.,MacLeod D. A.,Blair N.,Chamberlain G.
Abstract
An experiment was conducted to examine the
effect of deep-rooted perennial grasses on the water and nitrogen economy of 3
mature pasture communities with different botanical compositions but the same
fertiliser history. One pasture was dominated by volunteer naturalised pasture
grasses (Eleusine tristachya and
Danthonia spp.) (termed ‘degraded’), another
was phalaris (Phalaris aquatica) dominant (phalaris),
and a third was dominated by phalaris into which white clover
(Trifolium repens) had been recently sown
(phalaris–white clover).
Two replicates of each pasture type were grazed continuously over 4 years with
young weaner sheep changed each year. Measurements of hydrology, nutrient
cycling, botanical composition and animal production were made in order to
quantify the sustainability characteristics of each of the pasture types.
Data are summarised as absolute measures at various points in time and also as
trends over time. The ranking of standardised treatment measures was then
summed to provide an index of sustainability with or without a weighting
assumed to be representative of the relative importance of various layers of
sustainability viewed from the perspective of a hypothetical
‘typical’ grazier. The results show that the phalaris–white
clover treatment was substantially more sustainable, in both ecological and
economic terms, than either of the other treatments. The unweighted index for
the phalaris–white clover pasture was 3.61 compared to 2.08 and 1.98 for
the phalaris and ‘degraded’ pastures, respectively.
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Cited by
29 articles.
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