On-farm comparision of pasture production in relation to rainfall in central Otago
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Date
2010
Type
Conference Contribution - published
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Abstract
Dry matter (DM) yields of unimproved resident
browntop-dominant pasture on three Central Otago
dryland farms was <1.5 t /ha/year from 2008-2010. An
intensive pasture renewal programme over >18 000
ha applied lime to increase soil pH to ≥5.8 and reduce
aluminium to <1.5 mg/kg. The resident vegetation was
sprayed in autumn before spring drilling of perennial
ryegrass/white clover pastures or lucerne monocultures.
After renovation, ryegrass pastures yielded 3.1-5.3 t
DM/ha and lucerne produced 4.2-8.4 t DM/ha. Yields
of improved pastures were affected by the soil moisture
stored during autumn and winter and spring rainfall.
Together these gave a water use efficiency of ~16.0 kg
DM/ha/mm for lucerne compared with 3.5 kg DM/ha/
mm for browntop dominant pasture. Quantifying and
explaining yield improvements on-farm in relation to
rainfall and soil moisture deficits provide a transferable
basis for interpretation of results at other sites.
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Copyright © The Authors and New Zealand Grassland Association.