PLANT STRUCTURE AND THE ACCEPTABILITY OF DIFFERENT GRASSES TO SHEEP

被引:47
作者
OREAGAIN, PJ
机构
[1] Dept. of Agricultural Dev., (Eastern Cape Region), Private Bag X15
来源
JOURNAL OF RANGE MANAGEMENT | 1993年 / 46卷 / 03期
关键词
LEAF QUALITY; TENSILE STRENGTH; STEMS; AFRICAN RANGELANDS; LEAF ACCESSIBILITY;
D O I
10.2307/4002612
中图分类号
S8 [畜牧、 动物医学、狩猎、蚕、蜂];
学科分类号
0905 ;
摘要
Plant structure should be an important determinant of species acceptability to grazing ungulates functioning under various time-energy constraints. The acceptability of 9 grasses to sheep grazing a secondary grassland community in spring, summer, and autumn in South Africa was related to the following species attributes: plant height, leaf table height, tussock diameter, stemminess, percent leaf, leaf density, percent dry matter (DM), leaf tensile strength, and leaf crude protein (CP). Species acceptability over the grazing season was positively related to-tussock diameter (P less-than-or-equal-to 0.05) but negatively related (P less-than-or-equal-to 0.01) to leaf tensile strength and DM. Discriminant function analysis successfully discriminated between species in different acceptability classes in summer (P less-than-or-equal-to 0.05) and autumn (P less-than-or-equal-to 0.01) using a combination of plant structure and leaf quality attributes. Correspondence analysis indicated that preferred species were generally short and nonstemmy and had leaves of low DM, low tensile strength, and high crude protein content. Conversely, avoided species tended to be tall and stemmy with a high leaf table height, and had leaves of high DM and tensile strength but low CP levels. It is concluded that, for sheep, acceptability is determined by a combination of plant structure and leaf quality attributes.
引用
收藏
页码:232 / 236
页数:5
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