Concepedia

Publication | Closed Access

Nitrogen fertiliser use on rain-fed pasture in the Mt Lofty Ranges, South Australia. 1. Pasture mass, composition and nutritive characteristics

19

Citations

34

References

2003

Year

Abstract

The effects of nitrogen (N) fertiliser (0–200 kg/ha) on mass, botanical composition, and N concentration (%) in herbage were examined in nine 2- or 3-year rate × time of application experiments, 14 single-year annual rate of application experiments and 15 short-term spring rate of application experiments, at 27 sites in the Mt Lofty Ranges, South Australia, in 7 years between 1970 and 1979, inclusive. Effects on in vitro digestibility and concentrations of other nutrients in herbage were examined in selected experiments.Annual applications of 200 kg N/ha increased herbage mass by an average of 2.8 t/ha (57% increase), over the average yield of unfertilised pasture of 4.6 t/ha. Subterranean clover was eliminated from the sward with this rate of N application, although this may have been exacerbated by the experimental methods used. N fertiliser application increased herbage mass throughout the growing season, except in autumn 1972 when low rainfall restricted growth and about half of the experiments were not harvested. In 5 of the 126 individual harvests, herbage mass did not respond positively to N fertiliser applications, even though clover composition of herbage declined.A single application of 50 kg N/ha in autumn increased herbage mass, 6–8 weeks later, by an average 11�kg�DM/kg N, but this N effect only persisted to a subsequent harvest in about half of the experiments, with an average residual effect of 25%. Commonly, a response to N fertiliser in the first and/or second harvests was followed by a non-responsive period and then a depression in herbage mass, where no further N fertiliser was applied. With repeated N fertiliser applications, the average responses to 50� kg� N/ha were 11 kg DM/kg N in late winter and also in early spring, similar to the autumn response, and 18�kg�DM/kg N in late spring. In a later study, a single application of 50 kg N/ha in spring, for silage or hay conservation, increased herbage mass by an average of 1.3 t/ha in late spring while the average response to 100 kg N/ha was 2.0 t/ha. Clover composition declined but was rarely eliminated from the sward by these N rates when applied only in spring.From early winter to early spring, N concentration in herbage from unfertilised pasture ranged from 3 to 4% N and then progressively declined. Relationships between herbage N concentrations and increasing N rates were either linear or curvilinear in early and late winter, whereas in spring, many of these responses to N fertiliser were sigmoidal, with a decline in herbage N concentrations being observed at low N rates. Nitrogen fertiliser applied throughout the growing season had little effect on in vitro digestibility for a wide range of pasture compositions. However, in vitro digestibility of a pure grass pasture was increased early in the growing season by applications up to 50 kg N/ha, but was depressed by the same N rates applied in late spring. Consistently, an increase in N had the following effect on the concentration of other herbage nutrients: K�increased; Ca decreased becoming more pronounced as the growing season progressed; P decreased in late spring; and Cu fell in autumn. The content of these nutrients in harvested herbage usually increased with increasing N rate, particularly when associated with large herbage mass responses to N fertiliser. The K : (Ca + Mg) ratio in herbage, a criterion for grass tetany, increased detrimentally with increasing N rate. Strategies are proposed for using N fertiliser on rain-fed pasture in the Mt Lofty Ranges.

References

YearCitations

Page 1