Light interception, yield, spring regrowth and quality of Chloris gayana under different defoliation regimes

To study the effect of different defoliation regimes on light interception, forage yield, spring regrowth and quality of one of the most expanded species in this region, Chloris gayana, we evaluate combinations of two defoliation frequencies (300 and 500 GDD) and two intensities (1 and 3 green stubble leaves) in a controlled experiment that comprised 1500 GDD during summer and autumn. Defoliation frequency had a greater effect on the evaluated traits than defoliation intensity. Forage yield was lower under the higher (300 GDD) than under the lower (500 GDD) frequency defoliation (6699 vs. 8961 kg DM/ha, respectively), but forage showed higher leaf percentage (69.8 vs. 53.2%) and better nutritional value at 300 GDD (17.4 vs. 15.6%, 64.1 vs. 62.1%, 60.9 vs. 63.2% and 67.7 vs. 62.4% of crude protein, dry matter digestibility, neutral detergent fiber and its digestibility, respectively) than at 500 GDD. Spring tiller density was not affected by any of the defoliation regimes. Better livestock performance could be obtained by grazing at 300 GDD, but considering the whole growing season, more digestible dry matter is likely to be produced under defoliations every 500 GDD than every 300 GDD.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ruolo, Maria Soledad, Perez, Hector Eduardo, Rodriguez, Adriana Mabel
Format: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo biblioteca
Language:eng
Published: Taylor and Francis 2022-02-22
Subjects:Chloris Gayana, Productividad, Defoliación, Productivity, Digestibility, Crude Protein, Defoliation, Digestibilidad, Proteina Buta, Rhodes Grass, Defoliation Management,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12123/11357
https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/00288233.2022.2038212?src=&journalCode=tnza20
https://doi.org/10.1080/00288233.2022.2038212
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Summary:To study the effect of different defoliation regimes on light interception, forage yield, spring regrowth and quality of one of the most expanded species in this region, Chloris gayana, we evaluate combinations of two defoliation frequencies (300 and 500 GDD) and two intensities (1 and 3 green stubble leaves) in a controlled experiment that comprised 1500 GDD during summer and autumn. Defoliation frequency had a greater effect on the evaluated traits than defoliation intensity. Forage yield was lower under the higher (300 GDD) than under the lower (500 GDD) frequency defoliation (6699 vs. 8961 kg DM/ha, respectively), but forage showed higher leaf percentage (69.8 vs. 53.2%) and better nutritional value at 300 GDD (17.4 vs. 15.6%, 64.1 vs. 62.1%, 60.9 vs. 63.2% and 67.7 vs. 62.4% of crude protein, dry matter digestibility, neutral detergent fiber and its digestibility, respectively) than at 500 GDD. Spring tiller density was not affected by any of the defoliation regimes. Better livestock performance could be obtained by grazing at 300 GDD, but considering the whole growing season, more digestible dry matter is likely to be produced under defoliations every 500 GDD than every 300 GDD.