Seasonal relations between animal gain, pasture production and stocking rate on two tropical grass-legume pastures
- 1 January 1978
- journal article
- research article
- Published by CSIRO Publishing in Australian Journal of Agricultural Research
- Vol. 29 (1), 103-113
- https://doi.org/10.1071/ar9780103
Abstract
The relationship between stocking rate and liveweight change per animal was examined over a period of 3 years for two continuously grazed pastures, one of Brachiaria and the other consisting of guinea grass with Endeavour stylo and Siratro. On an annual basis there was no significant effect of stocking rate over the last 2 years, but on a seasonal basis there were highly significant effects in all seasons. In the dry seasons, animal gain rose as the stocking rate fell, but in the last two wet seasons gains fell with the lower stocking rates. On an annual basis the two effects cancelled out. Response surfaces for gain versus pasture yield and stocking rate were curvilinear (quadratic) during the wet season and linear during the dry. Optimum stocking rates (for maximum gain per hectare) were determined for the wet and dry seasons; the rate was greatly affected by the yield of green material during the dry season but less so during the wet. The possible causes of this reversed wetseason effect are discussed.Keywords
This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- Effects of fertilizer and stocking rate on pasture and beef production from sown pastures in north Cape York Peninsula. 2. Beef production and its relation to blood, faecal and pasture measurementsAustralian Journal of Experimental Agriculture, 1977
- Effects of fertilizer and stocking rate on pasture and beef production from sown pastures in northern Cape York Peninsula. 1. Botanical and chemical composition of the pasturesAustralian Journal of Experimental Agriculture, 1977