New Zealand Journal of Agricultural Research abstracts
Growth and milksolids production in pastures of older and more recent ryegrass and white clover cultivars under dairy grazing
J. R. Crush1
S. L. Woodward2
J. P. J. Eerens1
K. A. Macdonald2
1AgResearch
Private Bag 3123
Hamilton New Zealand
2Dexcel
Private Bag 3221
Hamilton, New Zealand
Abstract Dairy milksolids (MS) production rates
were measured in pastures consisting of different age-classes of
perennial ryegrass and white clover cultivars. There were four pasture
treatments consisting of factorial combinations of ryegrasses
representative of those available to farmers in the 1980s and 1998, and
clovers available in the 1960s and 1998. The pasture treatments were
grown in self-contained, replicated 4 ha farmlets and rotationally
grazed at a stocking rate of three Friesian cows per hectare. The 1998
ryegrass and clover cultivars were more competitive than the older
cultivar types, and tended to form a higher proportion of the sward at
the end of the trial. This did not translate into significant cultivar
age group effects on short-term pasture growth rates or annual pasture
dry matter (DM) yields which averaged 17.2 ± 0.9 t DM/ha over
years 2–4 of the trial. The 1980s ryegrasses had faster growth
rates in spring than the 1998 ryegrasses. Consequently, more silage was
made on average on farmlets sown with the 1980s ryegrasses (230 kg
silage DM/cow per yr), than with the 1998 ryegrasses (150 kg
silage DM/cow per yr), although the yield increase was statistically
significant only in the 2001–02 year. Herbage chemical profiles
and feeding quality were similar in all treatments. Nitrogen fixed per
unit clover grown did not vary with clover types. There was a very
strong linear correlation between annual clover yields and annual N
fixation. Annual N fixation totals varied substantially from the mean
value of 157 kg N/ha, as clover annual DM yields changed. Total
annual milksolids (MS) production ranged from 811 kg MS/ha per yr
to 1250 kg MS/ha per yr, with no consistent pasture treatment
effects. There was no significant effect of ryegrass type on milk
production per cow or milksolids production per hectare in any year.
Clover type had an effect on production only in 2001/02, with higher
milk production per cow and total milksolids production per hectare on
the 1998 clover treatments, due to the higher clover content of
pastures in this treatment. We suggest that annual pasture production
from these well-managed ryegrass-white clover pastures is very close to
the practical limit achievable in this region. Any major increases in
herbage yield will require novel plant germplasm.
Keywords cultivars; dairying; economic farm
surplus; endophyte; milksolids; nitrogen fixation; pastures; pasture
quality; perennial ryegrass; systems experiment; white clover
A05016; Received 11 April 2005; accepted 14 December 2005; Online publication date 9 May 2006
New Zealand Journal of Agricultural Research, 2006, Vol. 49: 119–135
0028–8233/06/4902–0119 © The Royal Society of New Zealand 2006
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