The performance of lucerne-wheat rotations on Western Australian duplex soils.

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dc.contributor Latta, RA
dc.contributor Lyons, A
dc.date.accessioned 2012-03-08T00:38:30Z
dc.date.available 2012-03-08T00:38:30Z
dc.date.issued 2006
dc.identifier.uri http://livestocklibrary.com.au/handle/1234/31431
dc.description.abstract In field experiments on duplex soils in the south-eastern and central Western Australian wheatbelt, lucerne (Medicago sativa L.) was compared with subterranean clover (Trifolium subterraneum L.) in pasture?crop rotations. Comparative pasture plant densities and biomass, soil water content, available soil nitrogen, wheat grain yield, and protein content were measured during 2 and 3 years of pasture followed by 2 and 1 year of wheat, respectively. Lucerne densities declined by 60?90% over the 3-year pasture phase but produced up to 3 times more total annual biomass than weed-dominant annual pastures and similar total annual biomass when annual pastures were legume dominant. Lower soil water contents were measured under lucerne than under annual pastures from 6 months after establishment, with deficits up to 60�mm in the 0?1.6�m soil profile. However, significant rain events and volunteer perennial weeds periodically negated comparative deficits. Wheat yields were lower following lucerne (1.3�t/ha) than following an annual pasture (1.8�t/ha) in a low-rainfall season, higher (3.7 v. 2.9�t/ha) in a high-rainfall season, and much higher when the previous annual pastures were grass dominant (3.4 v. 1.5�t/ha). Grain protein contents were 1?2% higher in response to the lucerne pasture phase. Overcropping wheat into a lucerne pasture of 19 plants/m2 reduced wheat grain yields, but a lucerne density of 4 plants/m2 reduced yields only where rainfall was low. The study has shown that lucerne?wheat rotations provide a productive farming system option on duplex, sodic soils in both the south-eastern and central cropping regions of Western Australia. This was most evident in seasons of above-average summer and growing-season rainfall and when compared with grass-dominant annual pastures.
dc.publisher CSIRO
dc.source.uri http://www.publish.csiro.au/?act=view_file&file_id=AR04016.pdf
dc.subject salinity
dc.subject soil water
dc.subject phase pastures
dc.subject pasture management
dc.title The performance of lucerne-wheat rotations on Western Australian duplex soils.
dc.type Research
dc.description.version Journal article
dc.identifier.volume 57
dc.identifier.page 335-346
dc.identifier.issue 3


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