Quality and quantity of chicory, lucerne and red clover production under irrigation
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Authors
Date
2004
Type
Conference Contribution - published
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Abstract
The quality and quantity of production from irrigated
lucerne, chicory and red clover swards were compared
over six years (30 November 1996 30 June 2002) on a
Wakanui silt loam at Lincoln University. Mean annual
yields from lucerne swards (21 t DM/ha) were 3.9 t/ha
greater than chicory and red clover over five perennial
regrowth seasons. Sown species gave 100% of dry matter
(DM) production in the first regrowth season, but by the
fifth season sown species gave 65, 55 and 0% of DM
production for chicory, lucerne and red clover
respectively. Utilised herbage had a similar metabolisable
energy (ME) content for all three species (10.9 11.6 MJ/
kg/DM). The crude protein (CP) content of utilised
herbage was also similar for lucerne and red clover
(0.25-0.29 g/g DM), but chicory had a lower CP content
(0.18 g/g DM). This combined with utilisation data to
show lucerne swards provided 30% greater annual CP
and ME intake for grazing stock than either chicory or
red clover. This demonstrated the greater potential of
lucerne to improve livestock production from high value
land. Changes in lucerne herbage quality were also
analysed within regrowth cycles to examine the influence
of the time of grazing on CP and ME intake. The fraction
of palatable lucerne herbage decreased linearly from 100%
at 700 kg/ha standing DM to 57% at 4300 kg/ha standing
DM. The CP and ME contents of the palatable fraction
of lucerne herbage were always higher than the post
grazing residual. This highlights the selective grazing of
the stock, which consumed 80% of total CP and 70% of
total ME for a crop of 4300 kg/ha standing DM. This
grazing preference shows that delaying defoliation will
not reduce potential stock production, unless stock are
forced to consume the low quality stem in standing
herbage.
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