Abstract

AbstractThe effect of level of nitrogen application upon the dynamics of herbage growth in a continuously grazed sward of tall fescue was investigated during two successive years. In order to obtain a large range of sward structural conditions, the experiments were carried out with two contrasting cultivars: cv. Clarìne and cv. Barcel, and, in Year 2, with two different sward heights or leaf area indices (LAIs). During each of five experimental periods (2‐3 weeks), swards received either optimum (N2) or deficient (N1) N applications, were maintained at their target LAI, and leaf growth was measured on labelled tillers. With continuously defoliated tillers, N‐shortage had only a small effect on the leaf elongation rate compared with tillers protected by cages. The leaf production per tiller was only slightly reduced by N shortage, and it was mainly by the means of a reduction in tiller density that the N deficiency resulted in reduced herbage growth per hectare. These results indicate that, in continuously grazed swards, in contrast with results previously found in intermittently defoliated swards, leaf elongation is not the only important component of difference in herbage growth and that the promotion of tillering rate is an additional pathway for N response in such management regimes.

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