Bruna Scalia De Araújo Passos, V. R. Herling, Manoel Eduardo Rozalino Santos, L. R. Carvalho, L. E. T. Pereira
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
The impacts of fertilization regimes and stubble heights in signal grass cv. Basilisk pastures were evaluated during latespring and summer in Brazil. Liming and N, P and K fertilization were applied to generate gradients in soil fertility tomaintain soil base saturations around 35%, 50% and 65%, increase soil P concentration and the proportion of K in soilcation exchange capacity, combined with two stubble heights of 10 and 15 cm. Herbage accumulation was not affectedby fertilization regimes and stubble height reaching 10 t/ha of dry matter during the growing season. Cutting at 10cm maximizes the leaf mass and leaf area index and decreases dead material mass without the need of high soil basesaturation and NPK fertilization rates to sustain plant growth. However, this stubble height required longer regrowthperiods to attain 95% of light interception (LI95%). A stubble height of 15 cm is preferred when short regrowth periods are required. The canopy height at the point of LI95% does not change with fertilization regimes, but the LI95% is reached at different canopy heights in late spring and summer in signal grass pastures. The adoption of a moderate fertilization regime is recommended as a strategy to obtain an equitable forage distribution between late spring and summer.
期刊介绍:
The Journal publishes, in English or Spanish, Research Papers and Short Communications on research and development, as well as contributions from practitioners (Farmer Contributions) and Review Articles, related to pastures and forages in the tropics and subtropics. There is no regional focus; the information published should be of interest to a wide readership, encomprising researchers, academics, students, technicians, development workers and farmers.
In general, the focus of the Journal is more on sown (''improved'') pastures and forages than on rangeland-specific aspects of natural grasslands, but exceptions are possible (e.g. when a submission is relevant for a particularly broad readership in the pasture and forage science community).
The Journal will also consider the occasional publication of associated, but closely related, research in the form of an additional scientific communication platform [e.g. a re-make of the former Genetic Resources Communication series of the former Division of Tropical Crops and Pastures of the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO), Australia].
Areas of particular interest to the Journal are:
Forage Genetic Resources and Livestock Production[...]
Environmental Functions of Forages[...]
Socio-economic Aspects[...]
Topics within the aforementioned areas may include: Diversity evaluation; Agronomy; Establishment (including fertilization); Management and utilization; Animal production; Nutritive value; Biotic stresses (pests and diseases, weeds); Abiotic stresses (soil fertility, water, temperature); Genetics and breeding; Biogeography and germplasm collections; Seed production; Ecology; Physiology; Rhizobiology (including BNF, BNI, mycorrhizae); Forage conservation; Economics; Multilocational experimentation; Modelling.