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Food, fibre and pharmaceuticals from animals
RESEARCH ARTICLE

Barley grass control with herbicides in subterranean clover. 2. Effect on pasture and wheat in the year following spraying

DW Stephenson

Australian Journal of Experimental Agriculture 33(6) 743 - 749
Published: 1993

Abstract

Barley grass (Hordeum spp.) in a subterranean clover pasture was controlled using herbicides at different growth stages in 1988. The residual effects of these treatments on a naturally regenerating pasture and on wheat were investigated in 1989. Barley grass control carried over into 1989 but there was no increase in subterranean clover seedling density 1 resulting from legume dominance in 1988. Dry matter I production in early winter, on plots treated with herbicide in 1988, was reduced by up to 62% compared with unsprayed pasture, and the proportion of other broadleaf weed species increased. Wheat yields were increased by 3-11% where barley grass was controlled with fluazifop-p in the previous pasture. Available soil moisture at sowing was lowest following pasture that was unsprayed in 1988. No effect on the level of take-all (caused by Gaumannomyces graminis var. tritici) was evident. A replacement graminaceous species should be introduced into the pasture following barley grass control so that animal production and soil conservation are not disadvantaged. A disease break for a following cereal crop can be maintained by sowing an oat cultivar that is resistant to cereal cyst nematode (Heterodera avenae).

https://doi.org/10.1071/EA9930743

© CSIRO 1993

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