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Beef production from three tropical grasses in South-Eastern Queensland


Citation

Whiteman, P.C. and Ridzwan Halim, N. and Norton, B.W. and Hales, J.W. (1985) Beef production from three tropical grasses in South-Eastern Queensland. Australian Journal of Experimental Agriculture, 25 (3). pp. 481-488. ISSN 0816-1089; eISSN: 0816-1089

Abstract

A grazing trial with beef cattle was conducted on three grasses, Paspalum plicatulum cv. Rodd’s Bay, Brachiaria decumbens cv. Basilisk (signal grass) and Panicum maximum cv. Hamil, in the first year. P. maximum was replaced by Digitaria decumbens (pangola grass) in the second and third years. There were three stocking rates (3.0, 3.75, and 5.0 steers/ha), plots were fertilized with 300 kg N/ha, in two replicates. Animal liveweight gain was low; maximum values were 650 kg/ha for pangola grass, 640 kg/ha for signal grass and 400 kg/ha for P. plicatulum. Liveweight gain was only poorly correlated with rainfall, because low winter temperatures retarded pasture growth. Correlations between liveweight gain and individual green leaf percentage in each species were high, particularly for P. plicatulum, which had only 2% green leaf in winter. Weight loss on plicatulum was therefore high in winter, and overall performance poor, even though this species had the highest percentage of green leaf in summer. Signal grass showed a higher tolerance to grazing at 5.0 steers/ha than the other grasses. Over most of the year, except in winter when only small amounts of green leaves were available, plicatulum had the lowest phosphorus percentage, sometimes below the 0.12% suggested as the critical dietary phosphorus percentage for cattle. Over all grasses, nitrogen and phosphorus concentrations were linearly related (r = 0.98). From this experiment, P. plicatulum was shown to be a poor grass for beef production and, for this grass and the other two species at this site, beef production using 300 N kg/ha could not be financially viable.


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Official URL or Download Paper: https://www.publish.csiro.au/an/EA9850481

Additional Metadata

Item Type: Article
Divisions: Universiti Pertanian Malaysia
DOI Number: https://doi.org/10.1071/EA9850481
Publisher: CSIRO Publishing
Keywords: Beef cattle; Grazing; Tropical grasses; Paspalum plicatulum; Brachiaria decumbens; Panicum maximum; Digitaria decumbens; Liveweight gain; Stocking rate; Nitrogen fertilization; Phosphorus; Winter temperatures; Southeastern Queensland; Rodd's Bay; Basilisk; Hamil; Pangola grass; Signal grass
Depositing User: Mohamad Jefri Mohamed Fauzi
Date Deposited: 26 Feb 2025 02:21
Last Modified: 26 Feb 2025 02:21
Altmetrics: http://www.altmetric.com/details.php?domain=psasir.upm.edu.my&doi=10.1071/EA9850481
URI: http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/115195
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