Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10976169 | Journal of Dairy Science | 2013 | 14 Pages |
Abstract
White clover (Trifolium repens) is an important legume for grazed grassland that can increase the profitability and environmental sustainability of milk production. Previous experiments on mown grass-clover plots suggest that low postgrazing heights (PGH) can increase sward clover content and herbage production. However, this has not been tested in actual strip or rotational grazing systems with dairy cows. Furthermore, lowering PGH in grass-only swards (typically perennial ryegrass without white clover) has previously been associated with reduced milk yields per cow. The objective of this experiment was to investigate the effect of PGH by dairy cows on clover content, herbage production, and milk production from strip-grazed grass-white clover swards in Ireland. Three target PGH treatments of 4, 5, and 6Â cm were in place for entire grazing seasons (February to November) for 3 consecutive years (2007 to 2009). Each treatment had a mean of 21 Holstein-Friesian dairy cows that strip-grazed a mean annual area of 10.2 ha. Postgrazing height was measured twice a day with a rising plate meter, and cows were moved to the next strip once the target PGH was reached. Annual fertilizer nitrogen input was 90Â kg of N/ha for each treatment. The PGH treatment did not significantly affect annual milk yield (6,202Â kg/cow), solids-corrected milk yield (6,148Â kg/cow), fat, protein, or lactose yields (265, 222, and 289Â kg/cow, respectively), cow liveweight (592Â kg) or body condition score (3.01). The PGH treatment also had no significant effect on sward white clover content (196Â g/kg). However, herbage production of both grass and clover were significantly higher with the 4-cm PGH treatment compared with the 6-cm treatment. Mean annual herbage yields were 11.1, 10.2, and 9.1 t of organic matter (OM)/ha for the 4-, 5-, and 6-cm PGH treatments, respectively. The lower herbage production in the 6-cm PGH treatment resulted in lower annual silage production, greater housing requirements, and a substantially higher net silage deficit (â1,917Â kg of OM/cow) compared with the 5- or 4-cm treatments (â868 and â192Â kg of OM/cow, respectively). Grazing to a PGH of 4Â cm is therefore recommended for grass-white clover swards.
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Authors
P. Phelan, I.A. Casey, J. Humphreys,