Some factors affecting grass-clover relationships.
- 1 January 1954
- journal article
- research article
- Published by CSIRO Publishing in Australian Journal of Agricultural Research
- Vol. 5 (2), 157-180
- https://doi.org/10.1071/ar9540157
Abstract
A study has been made on the Southern Tableland of New South Wales of factors influencing grass-clover balance in a pasture of two annuals, Wimmera ryegrass and subterranean clover. It was found that the decrease in the proportion of the grass commonly experienced under farm conditions was not due to increasing soil compaction or to scarcity of grass seedlings. It was due almost wholly to imperfect nutrition involving both nitrogen and phosphorus. Greatest yields of dry matter, nitrogen, and phosphorus were given by grass-dominant pastures rather than by clover-dominant pastures. A factor of which the field significance has not been appreciated is the competitive ability of clover for soil nitrogen. Results showed that under appropriate conditions grass development may be considerably reduced by competition for nitrogen by the associated clover. It is suggested that the faculty of legumes to use combined nitrogen has been contributed to the soil by prior legume growth offers the basic reason for the advantages to be derived from ley farming. Periodic cropping of pasture land reduces soil nitrogen to a level a t which the legumes again make an effective contribution of nitrogen by fixation of increased quantities from the atmosphere.Keywords
This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- The residual effect of phosphorus on soil fertility and pasture development on acid soilsAustralian Journal of Agricultural Research, 1951
- Competition among pasture plants. I. Intraspecific competition among annual pasture plantsAustralian Journal of Agricultural Research, 1951
- Sulphur in Nitrogen Metabolism of Legumes and Non-LegumesAustralian Journal of Biological Sciences, 1950