Compatibility, Yield, and Quality of Warm-Season Grass-Legume Mixtures

The lack of consistent summer pasture supply is a major limitation to livestock production in the mid-Atlantic region. Perennial warm-season grasses might provide a solution if managed for high quality. Experiments were conducted on separate well-established stands of Caucasian bluestem and 'Ca...

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Main Author: El Hadj, Meriem
Other Authors: Crop and Soil Environmental Sciences
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2014
Subjects:
hay
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/33897
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-07062000-17330011/
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-338972020-09-29T05:40:55Z Compatibility, Yield, and Quality of Warm-Season Grass-Legume Mixtures El Hadj, Meriem Crop and Soil Environmental Sciences Parrish, David J. McKenna, James R. Peterson, Paul R. Caucasian bluestem quality hay yield pasture compatibility. switchgrass legumes The lack of consistent summer pasture supply is a major limitation to livestock production in the mid-Atlantic region. Perennial warm-season grasses might provide a solution if managed for high quality. Experiments were conducted on separate well-established stands of Caucasian bluestem and 'Cave-in-Rock' switchgrass at the Kentland Farm near Blacksburg, VA. Stages of grass maturity at harvest simulating pasture and hay systems were tested. Six interseeded legume species and two grass monoculture checks, one with 56 kg N/ha applied in spring and after each harvest, the other with no N, were imposed as sub-plots. Legume species included alfalfa, red clover, sericea lespedeza, annual lespedeza, Illinois bundleflower, and purple prairieclover. Inter-seeded legumes contributed a significant amount to yield and quality of perennial warm-season grasses in the legume-establishment year. In the year after establishment, grass mixtures with alfalfa, red clover, and, for switchgrass, sericea lespedeza yielded as much forage as N-fertilized grasses. Alfalfa and red clover altered the distribution of yield of the grasses, and may not be as compatible with perennial warm-season grasses as sericea lespedeza in the long-term. Interseeded legumes improved quality considerably in the second year. Master of Science 2014-03-14T20:41:07Z 2014-03-14T20:41:07Z 2000-06-09 2000-07-06 2001-07-14 2000-07-14 Thesis etd-07062000-17330011 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/33897 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-07062000-17330011/ ElHadj-Thesis3.pdf In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Caucasian bluestem
quality
hay
yield
pasture
compatibility.
switchgrass
legumes
spellingShingle Caucasian bluestem
quality
hay
yield
pasture
compatibility.
switchgrass
legumes
El Hadj, Meriem
Compatibility, Yield, and Quality of Warm-Season Grass-Legume Mixtures
description The lack of consistent summer pasture supply is a major limitation to livestock production in the mid-Atlantic region. Perennial warm-season grasses might provide a solution if managed for high quality. Experiments were conducted on separate well-established stands of Caucasian bluestem and 'Cave-in-Rock' switchgrass at the Kentland Farm near Blacksburg, VA. Stages of grass maturity at harvest simulating pasture and hay systems were tested. Six interseeded legume species and two grass monoculture checks, one with 56 kg N/ha applied in spring and after each harvest, the other with no N, were imposed as sub-plots. Legume species included alfalfa, red clover, sericea lespedeza, annual lespedeza, Illinois bundleflower, and purple prairieclover. Inter-seeded legumes contributed a significant amount to yield and quality of perennial warm-season grasses in the legume-establishment year. In the year after establishment, grass mixtures with alfalfa, red clover, and, for switchgrass, sericea lespedeza yielded as much forage as N-fertilized grasses. Alfalfa and red clover altered the distribution of yield of the grasses, and may not be as compatible with perennial warm-season grasses as sericea lespedeza in the long-term. Interseeded legumes improved quality considerably in the second year. === Master of Science
author2 Crop and Soil Environmental Sciences
author_facet Crop and Soil Environmental Sciences
El Hadj, Meriem
author El Hadj, Meriem
author_sort El Hadj, Meriem
title Compatibility, Yield, and Quality of Warm-Season Grass-Legume Mixtures
title_short Compatibility, Yield, and Quality of Warm-Season Grass-Legume Mixtures
title_full Compatibility, Yield, and Quality of Warm-Season Grass-Legume Mixtures
title_fullStr Compatibility, Yield, and Quality of Warm-Season Grass-Legume Mixtures
title_full_unstemmed Compatibility, Yield, and Quality of Warm-Season Grass-Legume Mixtures
title_sort compatibility, yield, and quality of warm-season grass-legume mixtures
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/33897
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-07062000-17330011/
work_keys_str_mv AT elhadjmeriem compatibilityyieldandqualityofwarmseasongrasslegumemixtures
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