Cyclic Yield Stability of Ley Farming System in Northern Quebec

2019 ◽  
Vol 111 (6) ◽  
pp. 3310-3319 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hada Damar ◽  
Noura Ziadi ◽  
Jean Lafond ◽  
Denis Pageau ◽  
Julie Lajeunesse ◽  
...  
1986 ◽  
Vol 107 (1) ◽  
pp. 179-186 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. M. Abd El-Moneim ◽  
P. S. Cocks

SUMMARYThe ley-farming system (integrated cereal and livestock production in which cerealsrotate with self-regenerating pastures) is considered to be of great potential benefit to north Africa and west Asia. In the colder parts of this region (of which north Syria is typical) its application is limited by poor adaptation of commercial medic cultivars (mainly Medicago truncatula and M. littoralis). An extended selection programme hag identified M. rigidula as adapted to the soils and climate of the region but nothing is known of its adaptation to the ley-farming system itself.An experiment which included 23 selections of M. rigidula and one each of M. rotata and M. noeana was conducted over 3 years during which herbage production, seed yield, and the fate of seeds were observed during the 1st year when pastures were established, the 2nd year when wheat was sown, and the 3rd year when the pasture regenerated. Of the 400–800 kg seed/ha produced in the 1st year an average of 87% remained in the soil in spring of the 3rd year. The weight of seed regenerating in the 3rd year varied from 30 to nearly 170 kg/ha, and herbage production, especially in winter, depended heavily on the number of regenerating seedlings. The most productive regenerating pastures produced nearly 2 t/ha of dried herbage by 1 January, and more than 6 t/ha for the whole growing season.The results showed that there was sufficient residual and newly produced seed at the end of the 3rd year to be sure that subsequent regeneration would result in similar herbage yields in the 5th year, and that the pasture was assured of long-term persistence. The significance of this for livestock production is discussed, and it is concluded that the results should encourage further investigation of grazing management and socioeconomic factors seen as constraints to introducing the ley-farming system to north Syria.


1997 ◽  
Vol 11 (2) ◽  
pp. 201-210
Author(s):  
A. V. Rao ◽  
K. C. Singh ◽  
J. P. Gupta
Keyword(s):  

2002 ◽  
Vol 53 (5) ◽  
pp. 609 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. A. Street ◽  
A. M. Abd El Moneim ◽  
P. S. Cocks

The aim of this study was to determine if subterranean vetch can persist in a cereal–legume ley farming system and to determine when it is most susceptible to grazing. Grazing treatments were applied to a series of plots containing subterranean vetch during the establishment year. Thereafter the plots were alternately sown to barley or left for the vetch to regenerate. Early grazing caused a seed yield reduction of about 75%. Later grazing treatments had no effect on seed yield, which were between 1000 and 1400 kg/ha. The first cereal phase caused a 6–10-fold reduction in seed bank size. During the 2 years following the first barley year, the seed bank increased to about 900 kg/ha. The second barley year caused a 4-fold reduction in the soil seed bank. Although subterranean vetch managed to persist for 5 years, the dramatic reduction in the seed bank after the barley years indicates that subterranean vetch will not persist at a useful density in a system where 2 or more cropping years run successively. However, other studies have shown that there are enough genotypes with the necessary levels of hardseededness to fit the ley system.


1996 ◽  
Vol 36 (8) ◽  
pp. 1013 ◽  
Author(s):  
CC Martin

The first sustained effort to develop a ley farming system (a pasture legume rotated with a grain crop) for the Australian semi-arid tropics began in the late 1970s at Katherine, Northern Territory, where various strategies were identified and implemented. It was soon discovered that a main constraint to success was the invasion of the legume ley by grass weeds. This occurred despite the replacement of Townsville stylo (Stylosanthes humilis), which provided the base for the early work, with more competitive legumes such as Verano (Stylosanthes hamata) and Centurion centro (Centrosema pascuorum). Early weed control work focused on the use of chemicals, but later competition and population dynamics were studied in S. humilis pastures. The ley farming system comprised a number of essential elements, each of which offered opportunities for weed control First, a legume ley was rotated with grain crops. Past work concentrated on legume leys, but nitrogen (N)-fertilised grass leys may be successful if the N was economically supplied. Grasses can effectively suppress weeds. Rotation of herbicides is possible. Sicklepod (Senna obtusifolia) can be controlled with atrazine in the sorghum phase, and emergent Sida spp. can be controlled in the pasture phase using a herbicide roller. Second, cattle graze the legume ley and crop residues in the dry season. Cattle can be used to suppress grass weeds in the wet season. The major use of the legume ley, however, was to provide high quality food in the dry season when there was little other available food. Future research should investigate the economics of balancing the need for grass weed control with food provision in the dry season. Third, crops sown directly into a ley killed with a knockdown herbicide. Although the need for improved soil surface management was recognised early, development of reduced tillage was delayed until the availability of glyphosate. Initial work concentrated on improving plant establishment under mulch. Recent work has shown that mulches can effectively control weeds in crops without the use of herbicides; best weed control occurred when glyphosate was applied as a single application at sowing. Fourth, ley regenerated as an intercrop in the grain crop. There is no doubt that the presence of an intercrop reduces the yield of the grain crop. Future research should investigate the economics and risks associated with intercrop-induced changes in yield and herbicide use patterns. The extreme climate and sandy soils pose problems for herbicide use. There is marked seasonal variation in effectiveness of pre-emergence herbicides, ranging from zero to marked crop phytotoxicity. The effectiveness of knockdown herbicides is reduced by stressed target plants and rain soon after spraying. Mulch dynamics, grazing, competition and interference, and herbicide interactions with target plants and the environment, were identified as key features requiring attention in a ley farming system to achieve practical weed management.


1996 ◽  
Vol 36 (8) ◽  
pp. 1037 ◽  
Author(s):  
PS Carberry ◽  
RL McCown ◽  
RC Muchow ◽  
JP Dimes ◽  
ME Probert ◽  
...  

An innovative ley farming system, involving cereal crops grown in rotation with pasture legumes, has been tentatively adopted by farmers in the semi-arid tropics of northern Australia. Yet, after more than a decade of experimental research, the long-term


Author(s):  
Tom Edwards ◽  
John Howieson ◽  
Brad Nutt ◽  
Ron Yates ◽  
Graham O’Hara ◽  
...  

1977 ◽  
Vol 17 (89) ◽  
pp. 1011
Author(s):  
ER Watson ◽  
P Lapins ◽  
GW Arnold ◽  
RJW Barron ◽  
GW Anderson

The effects on pasture composition, soil nitrogen, cereal crop production and sheep production of two rotations in a subterranean clover (Trifolium subterraneum) ley farming system were studied over an eight-year period, 1965-1 972, in a 625 mm rainfall area at Bakers Hill, Western Australia. A short rotation (one year pasture-one year crop) commencing after either one or two years of pasture, was compared with a longer rotation (six years pasture-one year crop). Closed farm systems were usedwith the pastures continuously grazed by Merino wether sheep at two set-stocked rates. A two year rotation based on one year of subterranean clover followed by one year of cereal crop resulted in cereal grain yields in the third crop equal to that after six years pasture. Clover content of pastures was higher with alternate years of cropping. Soil mineral nitrogen was higher in the two year rotation before the third crop than after six years of pasture. The wheat crops did not respond to fertilizer nitrogen on either rotation. Grain yield was slightly lower following grazing at the high stocking rate. At the end of the experiment the grain yield from the second crop in the two year rotation was less than half that from the first crop and the difference in yield could not be eliminated by the use of fertilizer nitrogen up to 100 kg ha-1. The sheep on the short rotation were heavier and cut more wool per head at both stocking rates by the end of the experiment.


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