The performance of subterranean vetch (Vicia sativa ssp. amphicarpa ) in a cereal/pasture rotation in north-west Syria
Australian Journal of Agricultural Research
53(5) 609 - 614
Published: 14 May 2002
Abstract
The aim of this study was to determine if subterranean vetch can persist in a cereal–legume ley farming system and to determine when it is most susceptible to grazing. Grazing treatments were applied to a series of plots containing subterranean vetch during the establishment year. Thereafter the plots were alternately sown to barley or left for the vetch to regenerate.Early grazing caused a seed yield reduction of about 75%. Later grazing treatments had no effect on seed yield, which were between 1000 and 1400 kg/ha. The first cereal phase caused a 6–10-fold reduction in seed bank size. During the 2 years following the first barley year, the seed bank increased to about 900 kg/ha. The second barley year caused a 4-fold reduction in the soil seed bank.
Although subterranean vetch managed to persist for 5 years, the dramatic reduction in the seed bank after the barley years indicates that subterranean vetch will not persist at a useful density in a system where 2 or more cropping years run successively. However, other studies have shown that there are enough genotypes with the necessary levels of hardseededness to fit the ley system.
Keywords: amphicarpic, cereal, pasture, ley-farming, hardseededness.
https://doi.org/10.1071/AR01126
© CSIRO 2002