Stubble management of hay aftermath
Authors
Date
1983
Type
Conference Contribution - published
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Abstract
Possible management strategies for areas of stubble left after hay had been harvested
from a ryegrass/white clover pasture were studied in a trial on an irrigated Wakanui
silt loam at Lincoln College, Canterbury. Following a hay crop cut in late December,
the stubble was either trimmed to 2 cm (920 kg DM/ha) or left intact at 8-12 cm
(2200 kg DM/ha) and spelled for either four or eight weeks. Subsequent regrowth
herbage yield, botanical composition and digestibility were measured.
The highest live herbage mass of 5380 kg DM/ha resulted from leaving the stubble
intact and cutting the regrowth at four weekly intervals. The other treatments gave
herbage masses from 4120 kg DM/ha to 4350 kg DM/ha but did not significantly
differ from one another. However while 1220 and 1650 kg DM/ha of dead material
was present in the “stubble intact” treatments, only 470 and 880 kg DM/ha occurred
where the stubble was trimmed to 2 cm. The amount of dead material was the main
determinant of overall digestibility, as the digestibility of the green herbage was
similar (7980%) for all treatments. As a result of differing amounts of dead material
therefore, the herbage mass from trimmed stubble was from 4 to 10% higher in digestibility
than that from the stubble left intact treatment. Clover proportion was
high throughout the treatments, ranging from 50% in the long spelled treatment to
70% in the short spelled treatment. The results of this trial suggest that hay stubble
should be left intact but regrowth should be closely defoliated after four weeks to
maximise production and return the sward to a leafy state as quickly as possible.
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