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The measurement of perennial ryegrass persistence

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posted on 2023-05-03, 21:36 authored by Mike DoddMike Dodd, David Chapman, Cameron Ludemann, Wendy Griffiths, Katherine TozerKatherine Tozer, Liam Donnelly
Poor persistence in perennial ryegrass has been identified as a major limitation to pasture productivity, particularly in the upper North Island. Persistence can best be defined as the continuity of forage yield relative to a cultivar’s potential. Though there is limited evidence of differences in persistence between cultivars, there is interest in including persistence in the DairyNZ Forage Value Index. This requires an agronomically robust measure of persistence measured over a suitable time frame and connected to economic value. Five candidates are evaluated: plant populations, tiller populations, basal cover, ground score and annual dry matter yield. Scarcity of long-term data is a major limitation to development of performance values for persistence, and must be addressed. The four abundance-based measures also lack a clear connection to economic values, from the limited data available. A persistence metric is proposed, that relates medium-term dry matter yield to short-term dry matter yield, for which perennial ryegrass functional type and cultivar differences are demonstrated.

History

Rights statement

Open access

Language

  • English

Does this contain Māori information or data?

  • No

Publisher

NZ Grassland Association Inc.

Journal title

Journal of New Zealand Grasslands

ISSN

2463-2872

Citation

Dodd, M. B., Chapman, D. F., Ludemann, C., Griffiths, W., Tozer, K., & Donnelly, L. (2018). The measurement of perennial ryegrass persistence. Journal of New Zealand Grasslands, 80, 185–191.

Funder

DairyNZ Ltd

Contract number

A22997

Job code

27131

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