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A comparison of diploid and tetraploid perennial ryegrass and tetraploid ryegrass/white clover swards under continuous sheep stocking at controlled sward heights. 1. Sward characteristics
Author(s) -
SWIFT G.,
VIPOND J. E.,
McCLELLAND T. H.,
CLELAND A. T.,
MILNE J. A.,
HUNTER E. A.
Publication year - 1993
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/j.1365-2494.1993.tb01861.x
Subject(s) - tiller (botany) , perennial plant , stolon , agronomy , grazing , biology , dry matter , stocking , zoology
Two 1·0 ha plots of a late‐heading diploid perennial ryegrass (var. Contender) and a late‐heading tetraploid ryegrass (var. Condesa), and two 1·4 ha plots of the tetraploid with Aberystwyth S184 small‐leaved white clover, were direct sown in May 1987. Over the three years 1988–90 they were continuously stocked by Mule ewes with Suffolk‐cross twin lambs, from early April to the end of August, at a target sward surface height (SSH) of 4–6 cm on one set of plots (constant swards) and, on the other set, al 4–6 cm rising after June to a target 6–8 cm (rising swards). The heights were achieved by variable stocking. Fertilizer N was applied only to the grass plots at the rate of 150‐ 180kgN ha ‐1 annually. SSH was mainly within the target 4–6 cm, after higher initial heights at turnout in 1988and 1990. Mean heights of the constant swards (April‐ August) averaged 5·53, 4·43 and 5·04cm in the three years. The rising swards (July‐August) increased in height over the constant swards by an average of 0·88, 0·48 and 0·55 cm, in successive years. Clover content of the herbage mass dry matter in the grass/clover swards increased over each grazing season to average 13·0, 26·5 and 21·2% in the three years, with a high mean stolon density of 130 in m ‐2 in August 1990. Ryegrass tiller densities in year 3 were 23% higher in the diploid than in the tetraploid swards, which had 43% more than the 10000 tillers m ‐2 of the tetraploid ryegrass/clover swards. It is concluded that the combination of a densely stoloniferous small‐leaved clover with the open growth habit of a tetraploid ryegrass can achieve swards of high clover content under continuous sheep stocking.