Abstract

The current work was based on the central hypothesis that grazing management strategies modulate tillering dynamics of mixed canopies composed of kikuyu-grass (C4 perennial grass) and tall fescue (C3 perennial grass). Among the five grazing management conditions evaluated, three (7, 12, and 17 cm) represented the heights up to which the grasses were kept by mimicking a continuous stocking method throughout the experimental period (from May 2016 to October 2017), and the other two consisted of the heights 12 and 17 cm with a single grazing to 7 cm in mid-autumn. Nitrogen fertilization was applied only during winter–spring. The results showed that under severe grazing (7 cm), kikuyu-grass predominated in the area and that tall fescue population predominated in the moderately lenient (12 cm) and lenient (17 cm) grazed pastures, regardless of an occasional autumn grazing to 7 cm. After two years of evaluation, kikuyu-grass tillers were reduced to 6% of the total population in those pastures managed at the heights of 12 and 17 cm. Grazing management strategies modulate species proportions in a mixed canopy composed of kikuyu and tall fescue. Moreover, our data also suggest that it seems unlikely that there is a stable association of tall fescue and kikuyu-grass when no nitrogen fertilization is applied during summer.

Highlights

  • Areas of terrestrial globe with Cfa and/or Cfb climates present favourable conditions for pasture-based animal production systems practically during all the year

  • A possible model for livestock production in pasture in those conditions would be the one comprised of warm and cool-season perennial grasses grown in a mixed canopy, which can thereby extend the period of pasture use, providing greater resistance and resilience to environmental stresses, and greater sustainability to the production system [1]

  • As shown throughout the manuscript, grazing management strategies can modulate species proportions in mixed pastures composed of kikuyu-grass and tall fescue

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Summary

Introduction

Areas of terrestrial globe with Cfa and/or Cfb climates (characterized by cool winters, well distributed rainfall and warm or mild summer, respectively) present favourable conditions for pasture-based animal production systems practically during all the year. One of the greatest challenges to the success of binary systems constituting of mixed C4 and C3 perennial grasses is the choice of the cool-season species, since the chosen species has to tolerate a high degree of thermal stress and competition, especially during the summer period. In this sense, Lolium arundinaceum (Schreb) Darbysh (tall fescue) can be considered one of the few perennial grasses able to tolerate such stressful environments [2]. In this type of scenario, where the mean air temperature in the hottest month exceeds 23 ◦ C, the persistence of tall

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