2012
DOI: 10.33584/jnzg.2012.74.2886
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Understanding the role of spring grazing of lucerne in the Central Otago environment

Abstract: The Lucerne for Lambs Sustainable Farming Fund project used on-farm data and whole-farm modelling to help farmers understand the impact of increasing the amount of grazing dryland lucerne on Central Otago farms. On-farm results from 2 years showed that spring stocking rate on lucerne-based pasture averaged 10 ewes and their lambs per hectare compared with 3 ewes and their lambs on dryland grass-based pasture. Lamb growth rate was approximately 50 g/day higher on lucerne-based pastures, resulting in a total lam… Show more

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Cited by 11 publications
(15 citation statements)
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“…One issue consistently raised at lucerne field days has been a potential feed deficit between animal demand and lucerne growth in early spring (late pregnancy and early lactation). This has been addressed previously through the use of more winter cropping but can be seen as an impediment to using more lucerne (Stevens et al 2012). One suggestion is to use lucerne/grass mixes, which have been researched since the 1960s (Cullen 1960;O'Connor 1967;Vartha 1967;Fraser 1982).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…One issue consistently raised at lucerne field days has been a potential feed deficit between animal demand and lucerne growth in early spring (late pregnancy and early lactation). This has been addressed previously through the use of more winter cropping but can be seen as an impediment to using more lucerne (Stevens et al 2012). One suggestion is to use lucerne/grass mixes, which have been researched since the 1960s (Cullen 1960;O'Connor 1967;Vartha 1967;Fraser 1982).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…More stock then increased winter feed requirements in line with attempts to capture extra spring and summer growth generated from development of the feed resource using legumes. Studies using lucerne to increase whole-farm productivity and profitability have often captured the value in increased spring productivity (Stevens et al 2012;Fraser et al 2016), or changes in overall feed quality (Rendel et al 2017), thus supporting current Table 6 Production parameters for 5 scenarios with and without Lotus over-sowing farm enterprise configuration. However, Lotus at high elevations provides feed during late spring and summer, leading to the need for potential changes in enterprise configuration.…”
Section: Scenariomentioning
confidence: 88%
“…How is the resilience of the business affected? Walker et al (2010) defined resilience as the capacity of a social ecological system to deal with shocks, the specific nature of that shock to be defined at the time of occurrence. We propose that the key driver of biophysical shock in grazing systems is climatic variation, and that the key indicator of resilience is the ability to limit financial impacts of that variation.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Any progress may be hidden and some knowledge may be unknown. A recent lucerne programme in Central Otago (Stevens et al 2012;Casey et al 2015a) provided the example of implementing grazing of lucerne in spring, which caused farmers to question where their conserved winter feed was going to come from. Thus, the project had to address the whole management system to provide the answers to alternate winter feed supply and how much lucerne to plant before farmers would readily adopt grazing systems.…”
Section: Degree Of Complexitymentioning
confidence: 99%