Track 2-11: Plant Nutrition and Nutrient Cycling
Archived
This content is available here strictly for research, reference, and/or recordkeeping and as such it may not be fully accessible. If you work or study at University of Kentucky and would like to request an accessible version, please use the SensusAccess Document Converter.
Publication Date
2013
Location
Sydney, Australia
Description
Since fertilizers are used less extensively on Xaraes-grass (Brachiaria brizantha) pastures in Brazil because of costs, the main route of nitrogen (N) supply to plants is through nutrient recycling via litter decomposition. One of the strategies used to maintain the supply of N is to manage the pasture correctly by keeping it under grazing pressure so that the amount of recycled nutrients in the residue is sufficient to meet the pasture requirements (Jantalia et al.2006). Thus, the aim of this study was to evaluate different residual leaf area indices (RLAI) and determine which one provides the best restoration of pasture leaf area index and nutrient cycling.
Citation
Ruggieri, Ana C.; Raposo, Elisamara; Galzerano, Leandro; Panosso, Alan R.; Azenha, Mariana V.; and Janusckiewicz, Estella R., "Litter Decomposition of Xaraes-Grass Pasture Subjected to Different Post-Grazing Residuals" (2013). IGC Proceedings (1985-2023). 30.
(URL: https://uknowledge.uky.edu/igc/22/2-11/30)
Included in
Agricultural Science Commons, Agronomy and Crop Sciences Commons, Plant Biology Commons, Plant Pathology Commons, Soil Science Commons, Weed Science Commons
Litter Decomposition of Xaraes-Grass Pasture Subjected to Different Post-Grazing Residuals
Sydney, Australia
Since fertilizers are used less extensively on Xaraes-grass (Brachiaria brizantha) pastures in Brazil because of costs, the main route of nitrogen (N) supply to plants is through nutrient recycling via litter decomposition. One of the strategies used to maintain the supply of N is to manage the pasture correctly by keeping it under grazing pressure so that the amount of recycled nutrients in the residue is sufficient to meet the pasture requirements (Jantalia et al.2006). Thus, the aim of this study was to evaluate different residual leaf area indices (RLAI) and determine which one provides the best restoration of pasture leaf area index and nutrient cycling.
