Forage production and leaf proportion of lucerne in subtropical environments: cultivar, cutting frequency and canopy effects

In subtropical and humid environments the ‘winter-active’ cultivars of lucerne usually produce more forage with lower leaf proportion (i.e. leaf to stem ratio) than the ‘winter-dormant’ ones. Present research analyze (i) if differences in forage production changes with cutting frequency...

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Main Authors: Germán Berone, Nicolás Bertrám, Elena Di Nucci
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Facultad de Ciencias Agrarias. Universidad Nacional de Cuyo 2021-01-01
Series:Revista de la Facultad de Ciencias Agrarias
Subjects:
Online Access:http://200.12.138.7/ojs3/index.php/RFCA/article/view/3335
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spelling doaj-d1076963d93e41e78e7939b7817411ca2021-04-20T15:50:28ZengFacultad de Ciencias Agrarias. Universidad Nacional de CuyoRevista de la Facultad de Ciencias Agrarias0370-46611853-86652021-01-01Forage production and leaf proportion of lucerne in subtropical environments: cultivar, cutting frequency and canopy effectsGermán Berone0Nicolás Bertrám1Elena Di Nucci2Instituto Nacional de Tecnología Agropecuaria (INTA). Estación Experimental Agropecuaria Balcarce.; Ruta Nacional 226 km 73,5. Balcarce. Buenos Aires. Argentina.Instituto Nacional de Tecnología Agropecuaria (INTA). Estación Experimental Agropecuaria Marcos Juarez. Ruta 12 km 3. Marcos Juarez. Córdoba. Argentina.Instituto Nacional de Tecnología Agropecuaria (INTA). Estación Experimental Agropecuaria Paraná. Ruta 11 km 12,5. Oro Verde. Entre Ríos. Argentina. In subtropical and humid environments the ‘winter-active’ cultivars of lucerne usually produce more forage with lower leaf proportion (i.e. leaf to stem ratio) than the ‘winter-dormant’ ones. Present research analyze (i) if differences in forage production changes with cutting frequency, and (ii) if differences in leaf proportion are intrinsic (i.e. ‘cultivar differences’) or are due to variations in plant morphology (i.e. ‘aerial biomass and canopy height’). In two subtropical locations a factorial experiment including three alfalfa cultivars (FD4= ‘winter-dormant’, FD6=‘semi-dormant’, FD9=‘winter-active’) and three cutting frequencies (‘high’, ‘intermediate’ and ‘low’) was established. As the cutting frequency decrease (i.e. from ‘high’ to ‘low’) the more winter-active cultivars were more productive than the more winter-dormant ones (FD9>FD6>FD4) due mainly to a higher stem production. However, differences between cultivars disappear (FD9=FD6=FD4) as the cutting frequency increases (i.e. from ‘low’ to ‘high’ cutting frequency). Compared at similar canopy height, differences between cultivars in leaf proportion were practically irrelevant. We confirm that (i) in subtropical and humid environments, the differences in forage production between cultivars contrasting in their winter activity depend of the cutting frequency, and that (ii) the leaf proportion depends mainly of plant morphology, especially canopy height’, being irrelevant the cultivar and the environment. Highlights This paper shows that (i) differences in forage production between cultivars of lucerne depend on the cutting frequency, and that (ii) leaf proportion is governed by plant morphology, especially canopy height. Forage production was similar between cultivars at high cutting frequency but at low cutting frequency winter-active and semi-dormant cultivars (FD6 and FD9) produce more forage than winter dormant (FD4) ones. Lucerne cultivars showing the same leaf proportion when they were compared at similar canopy height suggesting that leaf proportion is not an intrinsic trait Changes in leaf proportion were better explained by changes in canopy height than by changes in thermal time. http://200.12.138.7/ojs3/index.php/RFCA/article/view/3335lucernefall dormancycutting frequencyforage productionleaf to stem ratio
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Germán Berone
Nicolás Bertrám
Elena Di Nucci
spellingShingle Germán Berone
Nicolás Bertrám
Elena Di Nucci
Forage production and leaf proportion of lucerne in subtropical environments: cultivar, cutting frequency and canopy effects
Revista de la Facultad de Ciencias Agrarias
lucerne
fall dormancy
cutting frequency
forage production
leaf to stem ratio
author_facet Germán Berone
Nicolás Bertrám
Elena Di Nucci
author_sort Germán Berone
title Forage production and leaf proportion of lucerne in subtropical environments: cultivar, cutting frequency and canopy effects
title_short Forage production and leaf proportion of lucerne in subtropical environments: cultivar, cutting frequency and canopy effects
title_full Forage production and leaf proportion of lucerne in subtropical environments: cultivar, cutting frequency and canopy effects
title_fullStr Forage production and leaf proportion of lucerne in subtropical environments: cultivar, cutting frequency and canopy effects
title_full_unstemmed Forage production and leaf proportion of lucerne in subtropical environments: cultivar, cutting frequency and canopy effects
title_sort forage production and leaf proportion of lucerne in subtropical environments: cultivar, cutting frequency and canopy effects
publisher Facultad de Ciencias Agrarias. Universidad Nacional de Cuyo
series Revista de la Facultad de Ciencias Agrarias
issn 0370-4661
1853-8665
publishDate 2021-01-01
description In subtropical and humid environments the ‘winter-active’ cultivars of lucerne usually produce more forage with lower leaf proportion (i.e. leaf to stem ratio) than the ‘winter-dormant’ ones. Present research analyze (i) if differences in forage production changes with cutting frequency, and (ii) if differences in leaf proportion are intrinsic (i.e. ‘cultivar differences’) or are due to variations in plant morphology (i.e. ‘aerial biomass and canopy height’). In two subtropical locations a factorial experiment including three alfalfa cultivars (FD4= ‘winter-dormant’, FD6=‘semi-dormant’, FD9=‘winter-active’) and three cutting frequencies (‘high’, ‘intermediate’ and ‘low’) was established. As the cutting frequency decrease (i.e. from ‘high’ to ‘low’) the more winter-active cultivars were more productive than the more winter-dormant ones (FD9>FD6>FD4) due mainly to a higher stem production. However, differences between cultivars disappear (FD9=FD6=FD4) as the cutting frequency increases (i.e. from ‘low’ to ‘high’ cutting frequency). Compared at similar canopy height, differences between cultivars in leaf proportion were practically irrelevant. We confirm that (i) in subtropical and humid environments, the differences in forage production between cultivars contrasting in their winter activity depend of the cutting frequency, and that (ii) the leaf proportion depends mainly of plant morphology, especially canopy height’, being irrelevant the cultivar and the environment. Highlights This paper shows that (i) differences in forage production between cultivars of lucerne depend on the cutting frequency, and that (ii) leaf proportion is governed by plant morphology, especially canopy height. Forage production was similar between cultivars at high cutting frequency but at low cutting frequency winter-active and semi-dormant cultivars (FD6 and FD9) produce more forage than winter dormant (FD4) ones. Lucerne cultivars showing the same leaf proportion when they were compared at similar canopy height suggesting that leaf proportion is not an intrinsic trait Changes in leaf proportion were better explained by changes in canopy height than by changes in thermal time.
topic lucerne
fall dormancy
cutting frequency
forage production
leaf to stem ratio
url http://200.12.138.7/ojs3/index.php/RFCA/article/view/3335
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