Herbage and nitrogen yields,fixation and transfer by white clover to companion grasses in grazed swards under different rates of nitrogen fertilization |
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Authors: | D Enriquez‐Hidalgo T J Gilliland D Hennessy |
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Institution: | 1. Animal & Grassland Research and Innovation Centre, Teagasc, Moorepark, Fermoy, Co., Cork, Ireland;2. School of Biological Sciences, Institute for Global Food Security, Queen's University, Belfast, UK;3. Departamento de Ciencias Animales, Facultad de Agronomía e Ingeniería Forestal, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile, Santiago, Chile;4. Agri‐Food and Biosciences Institute, Hillsborough, UK |
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Abstract: | In grass–legume swards, biologically fixed nitrogen (N) from the legume can support the N requirements of the grass, but legume N fixation is suppressed by additional fertilizer N application. This study sought to identify a fertilizer N application rate that maximizes herbage and N yields, N fixation and apparent N transfer from white clover to companion grasses under intensive grazing at a site with high soil‐N status. During a 3‐year period (2011–2013), swards of perennial ryegrass and of perennial ryegrass–white clover, receiving up to 240 kg N ha?1 year?1, were compared using isotope dilution and N‐difference methods. The presence of white clover increased herbage and N yields by 12–44% and 26–72%, respectively. Applications of N fertilizer reduced sward white clover content, but the effect was less at below 120 kg N ha?1. The proportion of N derived from the atmospheric N fixation was 25–70%. Nitrogen fixation ranged from 25 to 142 kg N ha?1 measured using the isotope dilution method in 2012 and from 52 to 291 kg N ha?1 using the N‐difference method across all years. Fertilizer N application reduced the percentage and yield of fixed N. Transfer of N from white clover to grass was not confirmed, but there was an increased N content in grass and soil‐N levels. Under intensive grazing, the maximum applied N rate that optimized herbage and N yields with minimal effect on white clover content and fixation rates was 60–120 kg N ha?1. |
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Keywords: | mixed sward Trifolium repens L perennial ryegrass N production biological N fixation intensive grazing |
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