The older the better? Delayed complementarity, overyielding, and improved residue composition in ageing alfalfa-fescue mixtures
Background and aims The introduction of ley in cropping systems can provide multiple services, including high quality forage production and C and N inputs into arable soils. Little is known about the dynamics of these services in degrading grassland and the extent to which trade-offs regarding the u...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Plant and soil 2024-06, Vol.499 (1-2), p.553-567 |
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Hauptverfasser: | , , , , |
Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Background and aims
The introduction of ley in cropping systems can provide multiple services, including high quality forage production and C and N inputs into arable soils. Little is known about the dynamics of these services in degrading grassland and the extent to which trade-offs regarding the use of fixed N for either forage production or as a source of N in the rotation can be found.
Methods
A six-year field experiment compared the performance of an alfalfa-tall fescue (A-FE) mixture versus the single species alone (A, FE) in terms of forage production, forage quality and root biomass available as residues for the following crop. N mineralisation potential was then simulated for different grassland destruction scenarios using the STICS model.
Result
The forage production, proportion of legumes, and forage quality all declined in the A-FE mixture after year 3 to reach less than 7 T.ha
−1
and 20% legume in year 6. The yield advantage of A-FE compared to monospecific grasslands increased over time and was strongly associated with greater species complementarity, resulting from higher N transfer to grasses and increased asynchrony in the seasonal growth of A and FE. Root residue quantities and the potential for N supply to the rotation were not reduced when a degraded legume proportion was reached.
Conclusion
The advantage of A-FE mixture over monospecific stands was greater integrated over a long period of time. No major risk of losing the N legacy effect by delaying mixture destruction was detected up to the first year after a sharp legume decline. |
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ISSN: | 0032-079X 1573-5036 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s11104-024-06479-z |