Early summer pasture control: what suits the plant?

Authors

  • C. Matthew
  • A.C.P. Chu
  • J. Hodgson
  • A.D. Mackay

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.33584/jnzg.1991.53.2008

Abstract

Plugs of sheep-grazed, ryegrass-dominant pasture were transplanted to a glasshouse, in order to make detailed studies of tiller appearance from the base of flowering tillers in late spring-early summer. In 2 experiments, cutting treatments which reduced the opportunity for transport of assimilate from parent flowering tillers to daughter tillers markedly reduced both numbers of daughter tillers formed and their size. In one of the studies, proportion of radioactive carbon dioxide fed to flowering tillers, but recovered from daughter tillers, was 7.0%, and this transported radiocarbon appeared to be delivered preferentially to leaf elongation zones of young tillers. There appear to be fundamental differences in tillerbehaviour between 'Grasslands Ruanui' ryegrass and 'Ellett' ryegrass. The implications for farm practice are briefly discussed. Keywords ryegrass, tiller dynamics, radiocarbon, summer pasture production, pasture persistence

Downloads

Published

1991-01-01

Issue

Section

Articles

Most read articles by the same author(s)

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 > >>