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A comparison between cutting and animal grazing for dry‐matter yield, quality and tiller density of perennial ryegrass cultivars
Author(s) -
Cashman P. A.,
McEvoy M.,
Gilliland T. J.,
O'Donovan M.
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
grass and forage science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.716
H-Index - 56
eISSN - 1365-2494
pISSN - 0142-5242
DOI - 10.1111/gfs.12166
Subject(s) - grazing , tiller (botany) , lolium perenne , perennial plant , cultivar , dry matter , agronomy , biology , yield (engineering) , zoology , materials science , metallurgy
Perennial ryegrass ( Lolium perenne L.) evaluation trials are often conducted under simulated grazing to identify the most productive cultivars. It is unclear whether simulated grazing identifies the most productive cultivar for animal‐grazed swards. Ten cultivars were established as plots and managed concurrently under simulated grazing ( SG ), animal grazing ( AG ) and conservation ( CON ). The experiment lasted 3 years with dry‐matter ( DM ) off‐take, digestibility, tiller density and ground‐cover score recorded in all years. A good relationship existed between DM off‐take under SG and CON ( R 2 = 0·73). The relationship between SG and AG was strongest in year 2 and 3 ( R 2 = 0·53 and 0·55 respectively). High DM production was observed in SG swards in year 1; this was weakly related to the DM production of the AG sward. Across the 3 years, the CON treatment had higher yields than either of the other two treatments and was poorly correlated to DM yield under AG , confirming that cultivars should be evaluated under a similar defoliation frequency to their intended use. Tiller density declined quickest under CON and slowest under AG . Some reranking of cultivars occurred between defoliation managements. The results show that simulated grazing is a useful indicator of DM yield performance of animal‐grazed swards.