Grazing management of native pastures in the New England region of New South Wales. I. Pasture and sheep production with special reference to systems of grazing and internal parasites
R Roe, WH Southcott and HN Turner
Australian Journal of Agricultural Research
10(4) 530 - 554
Published: 1959
Abstract
In a 4-year grazing experiment with Merino sheep, on a native pasture dominated by Bothriochloa ambigua S.T. Blake, three rates of stocking and continuous v. rotational grazing were compared. The effects of these treatments on the forage available and the botanical composition of the pasture and on sheep liveweights, size of sheep, wool production, wool fibre diameter, and parasitic infestation, both with and without drenching with phenothiazine, mere studied. The effects of seasonal conditions on the above and on the chemical composition of the pasture were also recorded. No consistently significant differences between grazing treatments in their effects on the pasture or on sheep liveweights or parasitic infestation were recorded, although during the final 3 years the total forage available was less under heavy stocking. Seasonal variations in total forage mere not marked, but, production of green forage increased greatly in the spring and declined to a very low level during winter. Similarly, sheep liveweights increased during spring and summer and declined in the winter. These liveweight changes were significantly correlated with the amount of green forage available. Wool fibre diameter showed similar seasonal fluctuations but the maximum diameter was attained earlier than maximum liveweight. Coincident with a spring rise in the amount of green forage there was also an increase in the percentages of crude protein and phosphorus in the green components of the pasture. Liveweight gains of the drenched sheep were significantly greater from the beginning of each experimental year in the late spring (November) to late winter (August) in all stocking treatments. In the spring, when the quality of the pasture improved and worm egg counts were low, drenching had no effect on liveweight gains in three out of four years. Drenching also significantly improved wool production and resulted in an increase in skeletal size of sheep in three out of four years. Drenching reduced egg counts of the parasites Oesophagostomum spp. and Haemonchus contortus (Rudolphi) Cobb but was less effective against Trichostrongylus-Ostertagia spp. For all grazing treatments there was no significant difference in the amount of wool produced per head, but over the 4-year period 56 per cent. more wool per acre was produced from the heavy than from the light rate of stocking.https://doi.org/10.1071/AR9590530
© CSIRO 1959