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a Tasmanian Institute of Agricultural Research, Univ. of Tasmania, P.O. Box 3523, Burnie 7320, Tasmania, Australia
b School of Agricultural Science, Univ. of Tasmania, Private Bag 54, Hobart 7001, Tasmania, Australia
* Corresponding author (Lydia.Turner{at}utas.edu.au)
Received for publication August 3, 2006. A greenhouse study was undertaken to investigate the distribution of water-soluble carbohydrates (WSC) within the lower 100 mm of Kara orchardgrass (Dactylis glomerata L.) and Matua prairie grass (Bromus willdenowii Kunth.) stubble through four distinct regrowth cycles. Water-soluble carbohydrate levels were consistently higher in prairie grass tillers compared with orchardgrass tillers. A decrease in WSC levels with increasing stubble height was observed for vegetative tillers of both species. However, the WSC concentration gradient was better defined for orchardgrass, with a clear decrease in WSC concentration between the 21- to 30- and 31- to 40-mm segments, and 77% of WSC content contained within the 0- to 30-mm stubble height range (with 0 mm representing the base at ground level). The WSC concentration gradient for prairie grass was less clearly defined, with a relatively high WSC concentration throughout the 0- to 100-mm stubble height range. There was a trend for decreasing WSC concentration between the 31- to 40- and 41- to 50-mm segments, with 62% of WSC content contained within the 0- to 40-mm stubble height range. These results suggest that the previously adopted defoliation stubble height of 45 to 50 mm, which is the optimal defoliation management for perennial ryegrass (Lolium perenne L.), maintains over 60% of stubble WSC reserves and therefore should not be detrimental to the persistence of orchardgrass and prairie grass. While decreasing defoliation height to 30 mm may be acceptable for orchardgrass, prairie grass is more sensitive to defoliation severity, with defoliation below 45 mm not recommended.
Abbreviations: DM, dry matter WSC, water-soluble carbohydrates
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