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Performance of cultivated perennial grass mixtures under different grazing intensities in the alpine region of the Qinghai‐Tibetan Plateau
22
Citations
13
References
2004
Year
EngineeringBotanyRangeland ProductivityLand UseAgricultural EconomicsQinghai‐tibetan PlateauSocial SciencesTibetan LambsSustainable AgricultureAlpine RegionPerennial Grass MixturesGeographyGrass MixturesCrop CultivationSpecific Leaf AreaAgricultural ModelingNatural Resource ManagementFarming SystemsVegetation ScienceSeed Processing
Abstract In 1998, seeds of four cultivated native perennial grasses, Bromus inermis (B), Clinelymus nutans (C), Elymus nutans (E) and Agropyron cristatum (A), were sown as mixtures with different seed rates in three combinations (B + C, B + E + A and B + E + C + A) in a field study in the north‐eastern part of the Qinghai‐Tibetan Plateau, China. A grazing experiment was conducted in 2000 to investigate the performance of these grass mixtures at leaf, plant and sward scales under different grazing intensities (GI). Four GIs, expressed as the proportion of herbage consumed by Tibetan lambs in relation to the available biomass (IP), were applied in the summer: no grazing, and 0·30, 0·50 and 0·70 of IP. Tiller numbers of the grasses increased and leaf photosynthetic rate, sward leaf area index (LAI) and herbage mass declined with increase in GI. No effect of GI on specific leaf area was observed. Interactions between GI and grass mixtures on the dynamics of species composition, swards’ LAI and herbage mass were found. Large fluctuations in species composition with different GIs showed the poor species compatibility and sward persistence of these grass mixtures under high GI by sheep.
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