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Regrowth patterns of elephant grass (<i><scp>P</scp>ennisetum purpureum </i><scp>S</scp>chum) subjected to strategies of intermittent stocking management

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Citations

21

References

2013

Year

Abstract

Abstract The morphogenetic responses of individual tillers and the composition of tiller populations throughout regrowth in response to all combinations of two post‐grazing heights (35 and 45 cm) and two pre‐grazing conditions (95% and maximum canopy light interception during regrowth – LI 95% and LI M ax ) were studied in swards of elephant grass ( P ennisetum purpureum S chum. cv. N apier) from N ovember 2011 to A pril 2012. Swards were subjected to the same treatments from J anuary 2011 until measurements began, to enable them to adapt to the defoliation regimes. Treatments were allocated to experimental units (850 m 2 paddocks) according to a 2 × 2 factorial arrangement in a randomized complete block design, with four replications. The total number of tillers (basal + aerial) was similar for both LI pre‐grazing targets. However, there was a change in the preferential growth pathway used by plants characterized by modification in the proportion of tiller classes in plant population. Swards managed with the LI Max target had a smaller population density of basal tillers and used the recruitment of aerial tillers as the main growth pathway. Although effective for maintaining stable rates of leaf elongation and senescence, such a strategy resulted in greater tiller death. Additionally, stem elongation, a consequence of the competition for light under those circumstances, resulted in differences in sward herbage mass and morphological composition with potential implications for herbage feeding value.

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