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Crop and Pasture Science Crop and Pasture Science Society
Plant sciences, sustainable farming systems and food quality
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Crop & Pasture Science

Crop & Pasture Science

Volume 75 Number 7 2024

CP24064Does tillering affect the grain yield of maize (Zea mays)? A quantitative review

Diego Hernán Rotili 0000-0003-4450-1870, José Roberto Micheloud, Fernando Ross, Leonor Gabriela Abeledo and Gustavo Ángel Maddonni

Tillering (equivalent to branching in broad leaf species) is promoted by management practices adopted in marginal environments for maize production. Farmers generally consider tillering to be counterproductive for grain yield in maize (Zea mays), but we found that across a wide range of environments, tillering is generally positive or indifferent for grain yield determination. Therefore, farmers should not consider tillering as a conditioning trait when selecting maize hybrids for cultivating this crop in different environments.

CP23266Effects of heading date and Epichloë endophyte on persistence of diploid perennial ryegrass (Lolium perenne). 1. Heading date

Katherine N. Tozer 0000-0002-0027-922X, David E. Hume, Catherine Cameron, Rose Greenfield, Tracy Dale, Wade J. Mace 0000-0002-3529-7700, Tony Craven and Marty J. Faville

We determined the impact of heading date on persistence of perennial ryegrass cultivars infected with a range of endophytes, in a plot study grazed by cattle. The two late-heading cultivars were more persistent than the two mid-heading cultivars, with higher yield, nutritive value, perennial ryegrass content in pasture dry matter, ground cover and tiller density, although persistence declined over 4 years for all cultivars.

CP24101Effects of heading date and Epichloë endophyte on persistence of diploid perennial ryegrass (Lolium perenne). 2. Endophyte strain and interactions with heading date

Katherine N. Tozer 0000-0002-0027-922X, David E. Hume, Catherine Cameron, Rose Greenfield, Tracy Dale, Wade J. Mace 0000-0002-3529-7700, Tony Craven and Marty J. Faville

We determined the impact of endophyte strain (standard toxic endophyte, selected strains nea2/6 and AR37), on the persistence of four perennial ryegrass cultivars. Standard endophyte resulted in greater persistence than the selected endophytes, with higher ryegrass ground cover percentage and content in pasture dry matter by the end of the study, and higher herbage yields in autumn. Persistence declined over 4 years for all cultivars, regardless of endophyte.

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