Early productivity of binary mixtures and single grass species
Date
1994
Type
Conference Contribution - published
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Fields of Research
Abstract
An experiment was conducted on a fertile Walcanui
silt loam in 1991/92 to examine the productivity
of 4 perennial pasture grass species, Grasslands
Roa tall fescue (Festuca arundinacea), Grasslands
Marsden hybrid tyegrass (Lolium perenne x Lolium
hybridum), Grasslands Maru phalaris (Phalaris
aquatica), Grasslands Wana cocksfoot (Dactylis
glomerata), and 2 binary mixtures, tall fescue plus
cocksfoot and phalaris plus cocksfoot. Between
July 1991 and September 1992 the highest
production came from phalaris plus cocksfoot at
19.05 t DM/ha. Hybrid ryegrass, phalaris, tall
fescue plus cocksfoot, cocksfoot, and tall fescue
produced 17.44, 17.13, 16.96, 14.17, and 13.13
t DM/ha respectively. The botanical composition
of both mixtures averaged equal proportions of
the sown species. The proportion of cocksfoot
increased over the summer period then declined
for the following autumn/winter period. The
experiment shows that simple pasture grass
mixtures may be highly productive. These findings support the increasing farmer practice of sowing
some pasture grasses in simple mixtures.
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Copyright © The Authors and New Zealand Grassland Association.