Data

Dryland Legume Pasture Systems: Legume adaptation trial 2019 regeneration

Centre for eResearch and Digital Innovation (CeRDI) at Federation University Australia
SARDI Minnipa Agricultural Centre ; Tomney, Fiona
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ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Adc&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2FANDS&rft_id=https://www.farmtrials.com.au/trial/30665&rft.title=Dryland Legume Pasture Systems: Legume adaptation trial 2019 regeneration&rft.identifier=https://www.farmtrials.com.au/trial/30665&rft.publisher=Centre for eResearch and Digital Innovation (CeRDI) at Federation University Australia&rft.description=Legume pastures have been pivotal to sustainable agricultural development in southern Australia. They provide highly nutritious feed for livestock, act as a disease break for many cereal root pathogens, and improve fertility through nitrogen (N) fixation. Despite these benefits pasture renovation rates remain low and there is opportunity to improve the quality of the pasture base on many low to medium rainfall mixed farms across southern Australia. A diverse range of pasture legume cultivars are currently available to growers and new material is being developed. Some of these legumes, such as the annual medics, are well adapted to alkaline soils and have high levels of hard seed, which allow them to self-regenerate from soil seed reserves after cropping (ley farming system). Other legume cultivars and species are available and being developed that offer improved seed harvestability, are claimed to be better suited to establishment when dry sown and/or provide better nutrition for livestock. Regional evaluation is needed to determine if they are productive and able to persist in drier areas (&rft.creator=SARDI Minnipa Agricultural Centre &rft.creator=Tomney, Fiona &rft.date=2020&rft.coverage=northlimit=-32.841281; southlimit=-32.841281; westlimit=135.163204; eastlimit=135.163204; projection=WGS84&rft_rights=Online Farm Trials Terms of Use https://www.farmtrials.com.au/terms-of-use/&rft_rights=Copyright. All rights reserved. https://www.farmtrials.com.au/terms-of-use/&rft_subject=CROP AND PASTURE PRODUCTION&rft_subject=AGRICULTURAL AND VETERINARY SCIENCES&rft_subject=Forage&rft_subject=Mixed species&rft_subject=Crop Type&rft_subject=Variety Type&rft.type=dataset&rft.language=English Access the data

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Legume pastures have been pivotal to sustainable agricultural development in southern Australia. They provide highly nutritious feed for livestock, act as a disease break for many cereal root pathogens, and improve fertility through nitrogen (N) fixation. Despite these benefits pasture renovation rates remain low and there is opportunity to improve the quality of the pasture base on many low to medium rainfall mixed farms across southern Australia. A diverse range of pasture legume cultivars are currently available to growers and new material is being developed. Some of these legumes, such as the annual medics, are well adapted to alkaline soils and have high levels of hard seed, which allow them to self-regenerate from soil seed reserves after cropping (ley farming system). Other legume cultivars and species are available and being developed that offer improved seed harvestability, are claimed to be better suited to establishment when dry sown and/or provide better nutrition for livestock. Regional evaluation is needed to determine if they are productive and able to persist in drier areas (

Created: 2019

Issued: 14 06 2020

Data time period: 2019 to 2019

This dataset is part of a larger collection

135.1632,-32.84128

135.163204,-32.841281

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