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Showing papers in "The Journal of Agricultural Science in 1983"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used tube solarimeters placed horizontally above and below the canopy of a potato crop to measure the amount of energy intercepted by the leaf surface and the efficiency of its use.
Abstract: Since Monteith (1977) proposed that growth can be analysed in terms of the amount of energy intercepted by the leaf surface and the efficiency of its use, there has been much interest in the measurement of light interception in potato crops (Scott & Wilcockson, 1978; Milford et al. 1980; Allen & Scott, 1980). This can be measured directly using tube solarimeters placed horizontally above and below the canopy. However, this method suffers from three major drawbacks: (a) in an experiment with many plots it becomes expensive in terms of equipment, (b) a single solarimeter samples only a very small part of the plot canopy, and (c) the solarimeter cannot distinguish between living leaves and other material. Thus, when the crop lodges and/or starts to senesce, visual observations suggest that the area over the solarimeter may not be representative of the plot as a whole.

138 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Use of generalized lattice designs instead of complete block designs in 244 cereal variety trials grown in the U.K. since 1975 has resulted in an average reduction in variances of varietal yield differences, providing guidance on the choice of block size and the potential for improvement by neighbour methods.
Abstract: Use of generalized lattice designs instead of complete block designs in 244 cereal variety trials grown in the U.K. since 1975 has resulted in an average reduction of 30% in variances of varietal yield differences. The lattice designs were most effective when the number of varieties was more than 50 but worthwhile reductions in variance, averaging about 24%, were obtained in trials with fewer than 20 varieties. The data also provide guidance on the choice of block size and the potential for improvement by neighbour methods.

97 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Optimum ages for specific harvesting periods were determined from regressions of tuber yield on age, however, optimum ages differed in the two varieties and the implications for production and storage of seed and testing of varieties are discussed.
Abstract: Data from nine experiments from 1973 to 1981 which examined the effects of physiological age on sprout and field growth of early potato varieties are reported. Length of longest sprout per tuber and all aspects of field growth were related to number of daydegrees > 4 °C experienced by the seed after onset of sprout growth (measured as the appearance of a 3 mm sprout). It is, therefore, suggested that this scale is an effective measure of physiological age. In Home Guard and Maris Bard, increasing age of seed tubers resulted in earlier emergence and tuber initiation, larger early leaf areas and increased early tuber yields. As growth proceeded young seed produced the largest and most persistent leaf areas and the yields surpassed those of older seed and in some experiments yields decreased with increasing age at the final harvests. Optimum ages for specific harvesting periods were determined from regressions of tuber yield on age. In both varieties, they decreased with delay in harvesting. However, optimum ages differed in the two varieties and the implications for production and storage of seed and testing of varieties are discussed.

95 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Acid detergent fibre was isolated from samples of feed and faeces, incubated in buffered cellulase solution, and the ash-free residue remaining was used as an internal marker to estimate the organicmatter digestibility (OMD) of the feeds.
Abstract: Digestibility trials were carried out using wether sheep, to determine the organicmatter digestibility of several forages. Acid detergent fibre (ADF) was isolated from samples of feed and faeces, incubated in buffered cellulase solution, and the ash-free residue remaining (IADF) was used as an internal marker to estimate the organicmatter digestibility (OMD) of the feeds. Estimates of the OMD value of the samples were also made using the standard in vitro digestibility technique.IADF had reached a constant value after incubation for 4–5·5 days and predicted OMD more precisely than the in vitro digestibility technique.It is concluded that IADF is a suitable internal marker and predicts OMD well. However, more work is required to test this technique over a wider range of herbage species and digestibilities.

94 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The data suggest that the initial size of carpel is an important factor in determining growth rate and potential grain weight in barley and may also be affected by pre-anthesis conditions.
Abstract: Grain growth and final weight per grain were measured in 12 genotypes of spring barley, the parents and progeny of two six-row × two-row crosses. Weight of carpels or grains from node 10 on the main shoot ear was measured from shortly after meiosis until grains were at maximum dry weight. Similar measurements were made at representative node positions along the ear of Proctor and of Midas spring barley cultivars.From about 10 days after anthesis grains grew at a constant rate for about 3 weeks. Amongst genotypes growth rate of the median grain ranged from 1·4 to 2'2 mg/day and there was a very highly significant positive correlation between growth rate and final grain weight. A similar relationship was found among grain positions on the ear. For about 10 days after anthesis growth was exponential and although relative growth rate did not differ between genotypes or grain positions there was a highly significant difference between caryopsis weights during this phase. There were significant correlations between final grain weight and carpel weight at anthesis and between final grain weight and husk weight at anthesis. In the period between meiosis and anthesis growth was exponential and the relative growth rate did not differ between genotypes or node positions on the ear. There were significant differences between carpel weights during this phase. Carpel weight at anthesis and carpel linear dimensions at meiosis were correlated.These data suggest that the initial size of carpel is an important factor in determining growth rate and potential grain weight. Potential grain size in barley may be determined by physical limitations imposed by the lemma and palea or may be causally related to the size of the carpel. The relative size of the carpel is determined by the time of meiosis and potential size may also be affected by pre-anthesis conditions.

84 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: There was little difference between the yields under rainfed and irrigated conditions, but groundnut, soya bean, sorghum and maize gave higher yields under irrigation and the different seed yields of the rainfed crops were due to differences in harvest index and the chemical composition of seeds, as well as to biological productivity.
Abstract: Six dryland crops (mungbean, cow pea, soya bean, groundnut, maize and sorghum) and two rice cultivars (C·171·136 and IR 36) were grown under rainfed and irrigated conditions on a dryland site with a clay loam soil at the International Rice Research Institute, Philippines. After the first 30 days of growth there was no effective rain, and the rainfed crops encountered different water deficits. Crop productivity, leaf area, plant water status, root distribution, and soil water use were measured.Neither rice cultivar yielded seed under rainfed conditions, but all other crops did. With mungbean and cow pea there was little difference between the yields under rainfed and irrigated conditions, but groundnut, soya bean, sorghum and maize gave higher yields under irrigation.The rainfed crops extracted different amounts of stored soil water, ranging from 100 mm for IR 36 to 250 mm for groundnut. The different amounts were associated with different growth durations, rooting depths and rates of soil water depletion from within the root zone. Biological productivity of the six rainfed crops with the C 3 photosynthetic pathway was linearly related to transpiration, which was estimated from soil water extraction and soil evaporation. Biological productivity per unit of transpiration for the two crops with the C 4 pathway was 2·2 times higher than for those with the C 3 pathway. The different seed yields of the rainfed crops were due to differences in harvest index and the chemical composition of seeds, as well as to biological productivity.The results are discussed in relation to the potential for growing dryland crops after rice in rice-based cropping systems.

84 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The model gives a good description of an experimental lactation curve; it is able to simulate the removal of milk by a suckling calf and machine milking with a variable number of milking periods a day.
Abstract: A simple model of the mammary gland is described. In this model secretory cells are produced by cell division from undifferentiated cells, and the rate of division is determined by the level of a postulated hormone. The total activity of the milk secreting cells depends on the number of cells, substrate supply (assumed constant), and the amount of milk currently present in the animal. The secretory cells have a finite life, although their death may be expedited by milk remaining in the animal over a longer period of time. The model gives a good description of an experimental lactation curve; it is able to simulate the removal of milk by a suckling calf and machine milking with a variable number of milking periods a day.

82 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a series of experiments were conducted to investigate fermentation in the rumen in animals given silage diets and the nominal metabolism of silage lactic acid in a total of 21 rumen-cannulated wether sheep and six rumen cannulated Ayrshire cows.
Abstract: A total of 21 rumen-cannulated wether sheep and six rumen-cannulated Ayrshire cows were used in a series of experiments to investigate fermentation in the rumen in animals given silage diets and the nominal metabolism of silage lactic acid. Dietary experiments with sheep (three experiments) and cows (two experiments) given diets consisting of formic acid–preserved perennial ryegrass (Lolium perenne) silages, in some cases with supplements of rolled barley, were conducted to investigate the ruminal concentrations of lactic acid and of volatile fatty acids (VFA) after feeding. Ingestion of silage was followed by a short-lived peak in lactic acid concentration in the rumen and by a subsequent increase in the concentration of propionate or propionate and butyrate. Butyrate production was more evident in cattle than in sheep. Taken as an average over a 6 h period of sampling the proportions (m-mol/mol total VFA) of acetate, propionate and butyrate in the rumen in animals given silage alone were typically 590–600, 210–250 and 70–150 respectively. When silage was supplemented with barley, in both sheep and cattle, the proportion of propionate was reduced and the proportion of butyrate was increased. In one experiment with sheep these changes in fermentation pattern were shown to be accompanied by an increase in the number of rumen protozoa from 2·78×105/ml to 18·66·105/ml (P <0·01). However, in a subsequent experiment it was shown that defaunation led to an increase in the proportion of butyrate in the rumen.Twelve estimates were also made with sheep of the metabolism of lactic acid infused into the rumen in a single dose of 20–50 g. These experiments showed that both (L+) and DL-lactio acid were metabolized equally rapidly with a half-life of approximately 25 min. In faunated animals the major products of fermentation were propionate with a small amount of butyrate. In defaunated animals lactate metabolism was slowed and the major product of fermentation was butyrate.In vitro studies of lactate fermentation were carried out using strained liquor and isolated bacterial and protozoal fractions from the rumen of sheep receiving silage diets. The rates of lactate disappearance (μg/mg protein/h) were 50 and 22·2 for the rumen liquor and bacterial fraction, respectively, which were significantly (P <0·05, n = 5) less than the rate of 294·7 for the protozoal fraction. Rumen liquor, bacterial and protozoal fractions yielded a similar mixture of fermentation end-products, propionate accounting for approximately 60% of the VFA produced.The results are discussed in relation to the metabolism of silage lactic acid in the rumen, the production of VFA and the yield of ATP for microbial cell synthesis. It is concluded that the pathways of lactate fermentation are regulated by the rumen microbial population and that protozoa may have an important role in the regulation of lactate fermentation.

79 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A scheme was developed to describe how the rate at which apical primordia are initiated in cereals depends on temperature and photoperiod and was used to analyse initiation in field crops of winter wheat.
Abstract: A scheme was developed to describe how the rate at which apical primordia are initiated in cereals depends on temperature and photoperiod. It was used to analyse initiation in field crops of winter wheat (Triticum aestivum L., cv. Maris Huntsman).For the initiation of leaves and spikelets, a straightforward linear regression of initiation rate R against mean air temperature (Ta) gave base temperatures (Tb) close to 0 °C for leaves and for spikelets. However, initiation rate was also correlated with mean photoperiod (P) and base photoperiods (Pb) of –0·5 h and 4h were established for leaf and spikelet initiation. When R was correlated with the index (T – Tb) (P – Pb), r2 was 0·62 for both leaves and spikelets.

77 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In the Mediterranean region, chickpeas are traditionally spring-sown since humid winter conditions encourage the development of Aschochyta blight which often causes complete crop failure as discussed by the authors.
Abstract: In the Mediterranean region, chickpeas are traditionally spring-sown since humid winter conditions encourage the development of Aschochyta blight which often causes complete crop failure. Lines resistant to this blight have been selected at the International Centre for Agricultural Research in Dry Areas (ICARDA) and thus winter planting has become feasible. The best selection, ILC 482, was sown in both winter and spring at three locations in northern Syria with contrasting precipitation patterns. Crop growth and soil moisture analyses were undertaken on all treatments, and relevant meteorological data were collected at each location. At all locations maximum greenarea and dry-matter production of the winter-sown crop was nearly double that of the spring sowing. Large differences were also observed between sites, with green-area and dry-matter production decreasing with precipitation. Depth of profile recharge, amount of extractable moisture and crop evapotranspiration also decreased with precipitation, but only small differences in these moisture variables were observed between winter and spring sowing. Duration of green-area production, as determined by the onset of rapid leaf senescence, was closely related to the fraction of extractable moisture in the soil profile, rapid senescence occurring in all treatments when extractable moisture fell below 40% of its maximum value. Differences in the maximum rates of green-area production are discussed both in relation to the depth of profile recharge, hence the depth of rooting and moisture extraction and to the ambient evaporative demand. The differences observed in green-area and dry-matter production was clearly reflected in final seed yield. The components of yield, number of pods, percentage of empty pods and seed size are related to the variations in moisture stress experienced by the crop.

73 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: There were considerable differences between seasons in the timing of developmental events on the apices of main stems, but a difference in sowing date was reduced to little more than 1 month in the time of anthesis and the maximum numbers of organs varied only slightly with sowingdate.
Abstract: Main-stem apical development and its inter-relations with other aspects of plant morphology were studied in seven field crops of winter wheat (Triticum aestivum L., cv. Maris Huntsman).Apical primordia were produced slowly in autumn and winter, then faster in spring as the weather became warmer. Spikelets were initiated about three times as fast as leaves. Leaf initiation ended at around the time that tiller bud initiation stopped. Apical dome length and diameter both increased during leaf initiation, reached a maximum at double ridges and then decreased. Double ridges appeared when very nearly 50% (range 49–52%) of the final number of spikelets was present. Spikelet initiation ended a few days after the first florets were initiated and when stem extension began, but usually before the stem apex rose above the soil. Floret initiation finished at about the time that the flag leaf appeared. Throughout tillering there was a strong association between tiller emergence and leaf appearance.There were considerable differences between seasons in the timing of developmental events on the apices of main stems, but a difference in sowing date of 5 months was reduced to little more than 1 month in the timing of anthesis and the maximum numbers of organs varied only slightly with sowing date.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the C and N in the biomass of soils from eight grassland field experiments where lime had been applied was determined by the chloroform fumigation method.
Abstract: The C and N in the biomass of soils from eight grassland field experiments where lime had been applied was determined by the chloroform fumigation method. Lime application increased C and N in the biomass by approximately 30% overall, although there was no effect at two sites. In the unlimed plots basal CO2 production, biomass C, and flush of mineral N production (FN) increased with soil pH. Biomass C and FN were correlated with total N content but not with organic C.Differences in the apparent C/N ratio of the biomass were found in unlimed soils of pH ≤ 4·5 and in those of pH > 4·5, the ratios being 4·2 and 5·8 respectively. For limed soils the ratio was 5·2. It is probable that the chloroform fumigation method is not suited to soils of very low pH, and that the C/N ratio obtained in soils of pH < 4·5 is artificially low.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The factors that had the greatest effect on yield were aphicide and fungicide, mainly from the control of Metopolophium dirhodum and Septoria spp.
Abstract: A multifactorial experiment sown to winter wheat cv. Hustler in autumn 1978 tested the effects of combinations of the following eight factors, each at two levels: drill type, sowing date, amount of nitrogen, division of nitrogen, irrigation, autumn pesticide (aldicarb), summer aphicide (pirimicarb), and fungicide (carbendazim, maneb and tridemorph). The mean grain yield of all plots was 9·7 t/ha and the best eight-plot treatment mean was 11·3 t/ha. The factors that had the greatest effect on yield were aphicide and fungicide, mainly from the control of Metopolophium dirhodum and Septoria spp. respectively. Both factors increased grain size and their effects were more than additive and greater with 250 than with 160 kg N/ha. Aphicide and fungicide also temporarily decreased the numbers of microbes on the developing ears. Autumn pesticide gave good control of aphids in the winter and some control in the summer: it also decreased nematode populations and slightly increased yields. Precision sowing compared with random distribution of seeds along the row had little effect on growth or yield. Sowing on 21 September compared with 13 October greatly increased growth early in the season but had less effect after anthesis; it was the only factor that increased yield when aphicide and fungicide were applied. There was negligible infection by barley yellow dwarf virus in crops sown on either date. The amount and division of N fertilizer affected N uptake early in the season and had small effects on the production and survival of tillers. Three N applications instead of one slightly increased grain yields but did not affect total N uptake by grains plus straw, which averaged 190 kg N/ha. The larger amount of N always increased N uptake but decreased yield in the absence of aphicide and fungicide. Irrigation slightly decreased yield despite prolonging the duration of green leaf area.

Journal ArticleDOI
I. M. Reid1, G. J. Rowlands1, A. M. Dew1, R. A. Collins1, C. J. Roberts1, R. Manston1 
TL;DR: Using an equation based on blood concentrations of non-esterified fatty acids, glucose and aspartate aminotransferase it was possible to assign correctly three out of four cows to either the mild or moderate fatty liver groups.
Abstract: The blood composition of 45 cows with more than 20% fat in the liver (moderate fatty liver) was compared with that of 83 cows with less than 20% fat in the liver (mild fatty liver). The cows were sampled at 1 week after calving and were from three Friesian and one Guernsey herds. Blood concentrations of non-esterified fatty acids, bilirubin and aspartate amino-transferase were significantly elevated in cows with more than 20% in the liver whereas concentrations of glucose, cholesterol, albumin and magnesium were all significantly reduced. Blood samples from cows in two of the herds were analysed for ammonia, insulin and D(-)3-hydroxybutyrate. Cows with moderate fatty liver in these two herds had significantly lower insulin concentrations and higher D(-)3-hydroxybutyrate concentrations than those with mild fatty liver. Using an equation based on blood concentrations of non-esterified fatty acids, glucose and aspartate aminotransferase it was possible to assign correctly three out of four cows to either the mild or moderate fatty liver groups.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Inbreeding, both of dam and of lamb, increased mortality in an upland, grassland flock of sheep comprising the Scottish Blackface, Cheviot and Welsh Mountain breeds and the crosses among these breeds.
Abstract: The incidence of lamb mortality from birth to 8 months of age has been studied over a 6-year period in an upland, grassland flock of sheep comprising the Scottish Blackface, Cheviot and Welsh Mountain breeds and the crosses among these breeds. Each breed and cross-bred type was maintained at varying levels of inbreeding. Approximately half the lambs which died were stillborn or dead on the day of birth, nearly 40% died thereafter but before weaning and about 10% after weaning.Post-mortem examinations on 586 of the 632 lambs which died from among the 2453 born attributed death on average to two causes per lamb. Approximately 11% of the causes were stillbirths or delayed births; 11% were cases of dystokia; congenital defects of various types accounted for about 10% of the causes; 25% made reference to weakly lamb, exposure or starvation; 14% to infectious diseases and 16% to noninfectious diseases. The extent to which causes of death occur together is examined.Breeds differed in mortality rate with the Welsh the lowest and Cheviot the highest. Cross-breds were better than the average of the pure breeds but this advantage emerged only in the period between 3 days and. 6 weeks of age. Inbreeding, both of dam and of lamb, increased mortality. Lambs from dams which were crosses of inbred lines had the best survival. Litter size, type of rearing, parity of dam, sex of lamb and birth weight also had significant effects on mortality rate.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A photomorphogenic effect is postulated which controls the partitioning of dry matter between the growth of new leaf and sheath tissue on existing tillers, and the development of new tillers from tiller buds.
Abstract: Simulating the accumulation of dead leaf sheaths in perennial ryegrass by masking the tiller bases increased leaf and sheath length and tiller weight but decreased tiller production. Exposure of previously masked tiller bases or stripping back the subtending leaf and sheath to expose the tiller bud in its axil stimulated tiller production. A photomorphogenic effect is postulated which controls the partitioning of dry matter between the growth of new leaf and sheath tissue on existing tillers, and the development of new tillers from tiller buds.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the livers of adult Scottish Blackface (B), Welsh Mountain (W), and B × W ewes fed diets containing 4, 9, 17 and 29 mg Cu/kg D.M. were measured over a 28-week period.
Abstract: Changes in Cu concentration in the livers of adult Scottish Blackface (B), Welsh Mountain (W) and B × W ewes fed diets containing 4, 9, 17 and 29 mg Cu/kg D.M. were measured over a 28-week period. Measurement continued during two further periods of 18 weeks when first all sheep were fed the diet containing 4 mg Cu/kg D.M. and finally, when 4 mg Mo/kg D.M. was added to this diet.During the first period the increase on all diets was least in B ewes and, apart from the 4 mg Cu/kg D.M. diet, greatest in W ewes; this difference increased as the Cu in the diet increased. The rate of increase for all ewes diminished towards the end of the period. All breed types retained proportionately less Cu in their livers as the Cu in the diet increased; at one extreme B ewes fed 17 or 29 mg Cu/kg D.M. retained equal amounts.When during the second period all sheep were fed the 4 mg Cu/kg D.M. diet the Cu concentration in their livers decreased, the rate of decrease being greatest for ewes whose mean concentration in the liver was highest, but at similar concentrations the decrease was greater in B than W ewes. During the final period the decrease was faster and was again associated with the mean Cu concentration, but the decrease was not significantly affected by breed.Throughout the trial, W ewes had the highest concentration of Cu in their plasma, whilst B ewes and ewes fed the 4 mg Cu/kg D.M. diet throughout had the lowest concentrations both in plasma and in their kidneys at slaughter.The results show that breeds differ in their ability to retain Cu from the diet in their livers. The magnitude of these differences depends on the intake of Cu and Mo from the diet and is affected by the concentration of Cu in the liver. Breed differences in the absorption and endogenous loss of Cu are suggested.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors found that changes in % K in dry matter during the growing season were directly related to changes in fresh weight to dry weight ratio (FW: DW).
Abstract: In 68 spring barley crops grown in five experiments at Rothamsted and Woburn between 1980 and 1982, and given adequate K fertilizer, there was a positive correlation (r = 0·76; P < 0·001) between maximum % K in dry matter of young plants and the grain yield at final harvest. In all crops changes in % K in dry matter during the growing season were directly related to changes in fresh weight to dry weight ratio (FW: DW) suggesting that differences in % K in dry matter were the result of differences in tissue hydration. Potassium concentrations expressed on the basis of tissue water were not correlated with grain yield. All crops maintained K concentrations in their tissue water of about 200 mmol/kg tissue water, except at the end of the growing season when water loss during ripening caused a steep rise.The correlation between % K in dry matter and yield was the result of differences in FW: DW. Within each experiment there was a good correlation between FW: DW and grain yield, but because the relationship was different for each experiment the overall correlation for all crops was poor. The correlation between FW: DW and grain yield within experiments probably arises because crops with a higher FW: DW will have higher specific leaf areas and hence higher relative growth rates and yields.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In a 2-year field experiment with potatoes measurements were made at successive harvests of the dry-matter yield of leaves and tubers and of the length of the root system, which indicated roots below 30 cm depth were substantially more active than those nearer the soil surface.
Abstract: In a 2-year field experiment with potatoes measurements were made at successive harvests of the dry-matter yield of leaves and tubers and of the length of the root system. Experimental treatments were 150 kg N/ha, control plots receiving no N, and each with or without irrigation. In both years the crop gave increased yields with fertilizer N and irrigation. Fertilizer N increased the weight of leaves and embryonic tubers as early as 6 weeks after planting; it had little effect on water use. Irrigation, which was applied only in the mid-season after water deficits of about 100 mm had developed, increased yields and water use. Highest uptake rates of N, P and K (g/m 2 /day) occurred 4–6 weeks after crop emergence when they reached 0·62, 0·071 and 0·88 respectively. At harvest the tubers contained (g/m 2 ) N: 8·7–21·1, P: 1·5–2·8 and K: 11·7–27·2. Uptake of all three nutrients was increased by application of N fertilizer and by irrigation. The average root length for all treatments throughout the season in both years was 12 km/m 2 of soil surface, with 84% in the top 30 cm of soil. From values of inflow of water and NO 3 –-N 1 calculated from depletion of successive 15 cm deep soil horizons, roots below 30 cm depth were substantially more active than those nearer the soil surface. During most of the growing season about half the nitrate reached the roots by mass flow. During crop growth NO 3 –-N concentration in the soil decreased to less than 10 μg/cm 3 to 30 cm depth. Summation of crop N and soil NO 3 ·N indicated net mineralization rates of soil N of between 0·07 and 0·17 g/W/day (average 012 g/m 2 /day). At final harvest the residue of N of about 9–10 g/m 2 on plots that received N fertilizer, included crop residues, NO 3 –·N left in the soil and leaf fall.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Differences in sward performance between stocking rates were due more to the difference in defoliation intensity between these stocking rates than to either treading or the return of excreta.
Abstract: The effects of treading and the return of excreta on a Lolium perenne-Trifolium repens sward defoliated by sheep set-stccked at high and low stocking rates were examined. Sward performance was measured inside ‘graze-through’ cages which allowed defoliation without treading and excreta return, and outside where sheep grazed either fitted with harness to prevent the return of excreta or unharnessed to allow the normal return of excreta. Live-weight gain was measured from excreta return and non-return swards. The treatments imposed had large effects on herbage growth and botanical composition.At a stocking rate of 25 yearling wethers/ha, sheep excreted about 1·1 kg N/ha/day, which increased soil N and led to an increase in herbage growth of about 26 %. The return of excreta increased ryegrass tiller density and this was partly responsible for a 26% reduction in the proportion of clover in the sward; the weight of clover was 13% loss where excreta were returned, and on this treatment stolon length at the end of the experiment was similar to that at the beginning. Doubling the stocking rate increased the N returned via excreta to about 1·3 kg N/ha/day, and this increased herbage growth by 53% but suppressed the proportion of clover by 21%, though not the weight of clover. Clover stolon length decreased during the experiment at this stocking rate, both with and without the return of excreta. Sheep live-weight change benefited from the stimulus to herbage growth where excreta were returned at the high stocking rate, but not at the low stocking rate.Treading by 25 sheep/ha increased soil compaction but had no significant (P > 0·05) overall effect on herbage growth and botanical composition. However, treading by double the number of grazing animals significantly reduced herbage growth by 10%, plant root weight by 47% and the proportion of clover in the sward by 11%.Differences in sward performance between stocking rates were due more to the difference in defoliation intensity between these stocking rates than to either treading or the return of excreta.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is concluded that varieties of winter wheat with the erect-leaf habit may provide an opportunity of increasing biomass production on light soils prone to early drought or at sites which would not permit the maximum expression of leaf area index at anthesis, varieties with a lax-leaf posture may give greater yield.
Abstract: Selections for erect-(E) and lax-leaf (L) posture in winter wheat were made from a cross between parents which contrasted in the character. By the F5 generation there were consistent, heritable differences between E and L lines. The lines were evaluated in three field experiments and a glasshouse experiment.In an experiment in which plots were automatically sheltered from rain and in which there were three irrigation treatments, there was no treatment-posture interaction, and over all treatments E lines outyielded L lines by 0·26 t/ha. When fully irrigated the water use of both E and L lines between 1 May and maturity was approximately 280 mm. Withholding water caused a reduction in water use and a corresponding reduction in grain yield for both E and L lines.When the four most erect- and the four most lax-leaved lines were considered over all three field experiments, E lines maintained a slight, though not significant, grain yield advantage of 0·17 t/ha over L lines. However, the E lines produced significantly more biomass, averaging 0·7 t/ha more than L lines, and this extra biomass was not produced at the expense of additional water requirement. However, results from the glasshouse experiment suggested that the E lines may be more susceptible to a substantial pre-anthesis drought.It is concluded that varieties of winter wheat with the erect-leaf habit may provide an opportunity of increasing biomass production. In an environment in which a preanthesis drought is unlikely to occur, such varieties may give the highest yields. However, on light soils prone to early drought or at sites which would not permit the maximum expression of leaf area index at anthesis, varieties with a lax-leaf posture may give greater yield.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The effect of pretreating soya-beans and rapeseed meals with formaldehyde was studied in this article, where four protein supplements were used to increase microbial N synthesis in a 4 × 4 latin square.
Abstract: The effect of pretreating soya-bean and rapeseed meals with formaldehyde was studied. Soya-bean and rapeseed meals, both untreated and formaldehyde-treated, were fed to cattle receiving a basal diet of silage in a 4 × 4 latin square. Formaldehyde treatment of both meals significantly reduced apparent N digestibility. All four protein supplements increased the amounts of non-ammonia N and amino acid N entering the small intestine over those obtained when silage was fed alone. Formaldehyde treatment of the meals increased the amounts of non-ammonia N and amino acid N entering the small intestine; this effect was significant, however, for only the formaldehyde treatment of the soya-bean meal. The low efficiency of microbial N synthesis observed when silage was fed alone was increased by the inclusion of both of the soyabean meals in the diet but not by the inclusion of the rapeseed meals. Formaldehyde treatment reduced the apparent degradability of the soya-bean meal N, determined in vivo, from 0·90 for the untreated meal to 0·40 for the formaldehyde-treated meal; similarly the degradability of the untreated rapeseed meal was reduced from 0·77 to 0·41 by the formaldehyde treatment. The in sacco technique gave values for degradability for the protein supplements which ranked them in a similar manner as did the in vivo technique; however, for any one meal the in sacco value for degradability was lower than that determined in vivo.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the digestibility and rumen metabolism of diets containing as 50% of their organic matter (OM), cotton straw (CS) untreated, treated with sodium hydroxide and treated with ozone, were studied in sheep cannulated in the rumen and at the duodenum with simple cannulae.
Abstract: The digestibility and rumen metabolism of diets containing as 50% of their organic matter (OM), cotton straw (CS) untreated, treated with sodium hydroxide and treated with ozone, were studied in sheep cannulated in the rumen and at the duodenum with simple cannulae. The concentration of total volatile fatty acids (VFA) in the rumen of sheep given the ozone and NaOH treatments was higher than in the untreated diet; however, the VFA profiles were not different. The rumen dehydrogenase activity, suggested to reflect general microbial activity, was higher by 83 and 81% in the ozone and NaOH treatments respectively, than in the untreated.Apparent digestibility of organic matter in the ozone-treated diet was 74·6%; 1·25 and 1·17 times higher than in the untreated and NaOH-treated diets respectively. The calculated values for organic matter and cell-wall digestibilities of the cotton straw in the complete diets were: 30·0, 20·0; 60·8, 60·0; and 39·6, 39·7%, respectively, for the untreated, ozone and NaOH-treated cotton straw. Nitrogen metabolism was not impaired by the presence of formic acid in the ozonated cotton straw; the apparent absorption of N from the intestine and the apparent digestibility of N were higher in the ozonetreated diet than in the untreated or NaOH-treated diet.The proportion of organic matter and cell walls digested in the rumen was higher in the NaOH and ozone treatments than in the untreated, and the possible reasons for that are discussed. A positive relationship was found between cell-wall digestion in the rumen (% of intake) and the rate of passage (% per h) of particulate matter from the rumen. The interpretation of this relationship is discussed in general and in view of the results of the present study.

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TL;DR: Plants were able to compensate and in some instances overcompensate for all observed levels of M. aeneus injury or artificial bud removal by the production of more axillary racemes, which may be due to the loss of apical dominance.
Abstract: The extent and possible mechanism by which spring-sown oil-seed rape plants can compensate for insect or artificial injury to flower buds and pods were investigated by examination of the yield, and its components, of plants collected from commercial fields and those grown in field cages and glasshouses. Plants were able to compensate and in some instances overcompensate for all observed levels of M. aeneus injury or artificial bud removal by the production of more axillary racemes, which may be due to the loss of apical dominance. Artificial injury to the pods or infestation by C. assimilis larvae did not result in a significant reduction in the yield of seed and was compensated for partly by a slight increase in the number of axillary racemes and by slight increases in the number of pods on each axillary raceme and in the 1000-seed weight, and resulted mainly from the diversion of nutrients to other yield-bearing organs. Injury by D. brassicae larvae was partly compensated for in 1975 and at lower injury levels in 1974 and involved a similar mechanism to compensation for C. assimilis injury. These results are discussed in relation to the observed infestation levels in field surveys and current control practices.

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TL;DR: Of the sward sampling techniques, the difference method, based on pre- and post-grazing sampling, has the greatest potential for providing valid estimates of herbage intake, but only when grazing periods are short and stocking densities are relatively high.
Abstract: Herbage intake by grazing dairy cows can be estimated by measurements on the pasture ('t Mannetje, 1978) or by measurements on the animal (Raymond, 1969; Corbett, 1978). Of the sward sampling techniques, the difference method, based on pre- and post-grazing sampling, has the greatest potential for providing valid estimates of herbage intake, but only when grazing periods are short and stocking densities are relatively high (Pigden & Minson, 1969). Estimates of intake by measurements on the animal are made by the faecal output-indigestibility ratio technique (Raymond, 1969; Corbett, 1978). The most widely used marker for the determination of faecal output is chromic oxide (Cr2O3).

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TL;DR: Differences between three sets of 9-month-old chimaera-derived triplets support the view that the individual differences in P metabolism have a genetic basis.
Abstract: SUMMARY The effect of ratios of calcium to phosphorus in the diet (varying from 0·6 to 3·6) on the absorption and excretion of P was investigated with four sets of 9-month-old chimaera-derived triplets. A pelleted cereal-based diet supplemented to contain 1·5, 3·1 or 6·2 g P/kg D.M. and 3·4 or 5·4 g Ca/kg D.M. was used in a factorial design. The additional Ca in the diet reduced the efficiency of absorption of the P supplements in the diet by 0·18 ± 0·04. The efficiencies of absorption of total P were very similar within but markedly different between (P < 0·001) sets of triplets, the mean values being 0·62, 0·74, 0·82 and 0·84. The fractional absorption of inorganic P alone showed the same ranking and the mean values were 0·47, 0·67, 0·85 and 0·92. These differences between triplets support the view that the individual differences in P metabolism have a genetic basis. The mean absorbability of P in the basic diet (0·77) and in the P supplements (0·73) were similar. The pattern of excretion of absorbed P between the faecal and urinary route of excretion varied between the sets of triplets; as P intake increased, the additional absorbed P was excreted in faeces by one set, in urine by another and in faeces and urine by two sets. The relative importance of the faecal route was dependent upon the fractional absorption of P secreted into the gut.

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TL;DR: It was concluded that microbial composition is important in regulating the relative rates of lipolysis and hydrogenation which determined the amount of unsaturated dietary fatty acid present in the rumen.
Abstract: Five Romney wethers, fitted with rumen fistulae, were each fed five pelleted diets high in starch (30–50%) containing 0·72, 1·22, 1·72, 2·47 and 3·72% N respectively. Samples of rumen liquor were incubated with glycerol-tri-[1-14C]oleate or with [1-14C]- linoleic acid. The rates of lipolysis or hydrogenation of these substrates were measured. In addition rumen contents of the sheep when fed the 1·22% N diet were incubated with radioactive substrates plus 0, 100 and 200 mg finely ground casein.It was found that there was an approximately linear increase in the rate of lipolysis between 0·7 and 2·5% N. The rate of hydrogenation did not increase below l·2% N and tended to decrease above 2·5% N. The potential for hydrogenation of unesterified linoleic acid was calculated to be 4–6 times greater with all diets except that containing 1·2% N. This may be one explanation for the elevated concentration of the rumen unsaturated fatty acids in sheep fed diets containing ca. 1–1·5% N.It was also established that the addition of finely ground casein to the incubate was without effect.It was concluded that microbial composition is important in regulating the relative rates of lipolysis and hydrogenation which determined the amount of unsaturated dietary fatty acid present in the rumen.

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TL;DR: The large cattle were least able to compensate for the higher stocking rate by increasing grazing time or frequency of biting, and consequent differences in intake, live-weight gain and grazing behaviour were recorded.
Abstract: Twenty-four Friesian cattle classed as large, medium or small and from 776 to 163 kg initial live weight (LW) were grazed over two successive 8-week periods. Two stocking rates were imposed and there were four replicates. Trios of animals, including one of each size, grazed in each paddock. Cattle changed stocking rate in mid-season. Herbage intake, live-weight gain and grazing behaviour were recorded.The stocking rates resulted in large differences in herbage allowance and consequent differences in intake, live-weight gain and grazing behaviour. The large cattle were least able to compensate for the higher stocking rate by increasing grazing time or frequency of biting. Average herbage organic-matter (OM) intakes ranged from 13 g OM/kg LW for large animals to 28 g OM/kg LW for the small animals.

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TL;DR: The proportion of acid-pepsin soluble nitrogen in the undegraded residues of untreated and treated soya-bean meal and rapeseed meal was similar to the original samples and a distinguishable decrease in the methionine concentration was observed.
Abstract: Soya-bean meal and rapeseed meal treated with 0, 0·4 or 0·8 g formaldehyde/100 g crude protein (N × 6·25) was incubated in the rumen in nylon bags with 10 and 40 μm aperture.Disappearance of dry matter and nitrogenous compounds was reduced with increasing formaldehyde treatment.The proportion of acid-pepsin soluble nitrogen in the undegraded residues of untreated and treated soya-bean meal was similar to the original samples. For rapeseed meal the proportion of acid-pepsin soluble nitrogen in the undegraded residues decreased with increasing rumen incubation time. This reduction decreased with increasing formaldehyde treatment.Concentration of amino acids in the undegraded residues did not generally deviate from those in the original samples. However, a distinguishable decrease in the methionine concentration was observed in all the rapeseed meal samples and in glutamic acid concentration in rapeseed meal treated with 0 and 0·4 g formaldehyde/100g- crude protein.Most of the changes due to rumen incubation were smaller using the 10 μm bags than using the 40 μm bags. However, the bag pore size did not play a decisive role in the conclusions of the results given.

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TL;DR: Differences between the two cultivars concerning the sensitivity of the mechanisms inducing proline accumulation to water stress existed mainly in the reproductive phase: Generoso accumulated proline more readily than Yecora.
Abstract: SUMMARY The course of free proline accumulation in leaves, stems, roots and ears was examined during the development of the wheat cultivars Yecora and Generoso grown in the field with or without irrigation. More negative values of leaf water potential were associated with higher amounts of free proline in the various organs. In most cases, proline accumulated more readily with increasing water stress before heading than after ear emergence in the leaves, stems and roots of both varieties. Differences between the two cultivars concerning the sensitivity of the mechanisms inducing proline accumulation to water stress existed mainly in the reproductive phase: Generoso accumulated proline more readily than Yecora. There is evidence that the increased amounts of free proline in Generoso can be associated with more effective dehydration and drought avoidance mechanisms.