Monitoring the toxicity of lupin (Lupinus angustifolius) stubbles has limited value in the prevention of lupinosis

1992 ◽  
Vol 32 (6) ◽  
pp. 707
Author(s):  
PW Morcombe ◽  
JG Allen ◽  
GR Hancock ◽  
RH Jacob ◽  
DL Hopkins

Lupin (Lupinus angustifolius) stubbles at 3 'sentinel' sites in the Midlands Region of Western Australia were monitored throughout the summer of 1985-86 to assess the level of infection of the stems by the fungus Phomopsis leptostromiformis, and to measure the concentration of its toxic product, phomopsin A. These parameters were found to have little value as predictors of fungal infection and of the toxicity of lupin stubbles on farms in surrounding districts. It was found also that visual rating of the level of P. leptostromiforrnis infection of lupin stems was unrelated to the concentration of phomopsin A in those stems or to the liver damage in sheep grazing stubble from which the stems were sampled. It is suggested that these ratings should not be used to advise farmers on the 'lupinosis risk' of a lupin stubble. Monitoring the phomopsin A concentration in lupin stems collected throughout a summer confirmed that rain, associated with cloudy days, was the primary environmental stimulus to a significant increase in the phomopsin A concentration.

1987 ◽  
Vol 27 (1) ◽  
pp. 19 ◽  
Author(s):  
PW Morcombe ◽  
KP Croker ◽  
JG Allen

Merino wether weaners were grazed on mixed crops of oats and sweet lupins at 3 stocking rates (15, 30 and 60 sheep/ha), pure lupins (60 sheep/ha) or pastures (7.5 sheep/ha) with and without an ad libitum ration of an oat-lupin grain mix in 2 experiments. Changes in liveweights and liver damage due to lupinosis were measured. In experiment 1, when grazing commenced in late January 1982, the weaners grazed on the mixed crops at 15, 30 and 60 sheep/ha gained 4.8 kg over 91 days, 2.9 kg over 43 days and 1.2 kg over 43 days, respectively, while those on the pure lupins gained 0.7 kg over 14 days. These liveweight gains were all less (P<0.05) than the 10 kg increase over 70 days by the weaners on pasture which received the ad libitum supplement of oat-lupin grain (about 2.2% N). Liver damage developed at a slower rate in the sheep on the mixed crops. In experiment 2, when grazing commenced in late November 1983, the weaners grazed on the mixed crops at 15,30 and 60 sheep/ha gained 1 1.3 kg over 70 days, 6.2 kg over 42 days and 3.5 kg over 28 days, respectively, while those on the pure lupins gained 3.4 kg over 28 days. These liveweight gains compared with a 12.5 kg gain over 84 days by the weaners on pasture which received the ad libitum supplement of oat-lupin grain (about 2.60%N). There was less Phomopsis leptostromiformis on the lupin stems in this experiment and the sheep livers were not as badly damaged as in the previous experiment. The development of liver damage was again delayed in the weaners grazed on the mixed crops. It was concluded that Merino wether weaners can increase liveweights when grazed on mixed crops of oats and sweet lupins. The amount of increase depends on the grain available to the sheep and the degree of lupinosis-associated liver damage suffered by the sheep. Grazing mixed crops reduces the development of lupinosis.


2018 ◽  
Vol 58 (12) ◽  
pp. 2269 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. Real ◽  
C. M. Oldham ◽  
A. van Burgel ◽  
E. Dobbe ◽  
J. Hardy

Tedera (Bituminaria bituminosa C.H Stirt. vars. albomarginata and crassiuscula) is a traditional forage species for goats in the Canary Islands, Spain. It has agronomic characteristics ideally suited to Mediterranean-like climates that allows it to provide high quality green forage for grazing animals during summer and autumn. It can be used to extend the growing season into late spring and early summer and/or to reduce or eliminate the need for expensive hand feeding of grain and hay to sheep to fill the ‘feed gap’ during the dry season in southern Australian farming systems. Three sheep grazing experiments were carried out with the objective to evaluate sheep production during summer and autumn with tedera as the sole diet. A 3-ha site at Dandaragan, Western Australia was grazed during the summer and autumn of 2014–2015 and 2016 and a 2.4-ha site was grazed at Kojonup, Western Australia during the same period in 2016. At each site, two grazing treatments were evaluated, continuous grazing and rotational grazing with six plots (14 days of grazing and 70 days of recovery). The first hypothesis tested was that tedera plants would not survive continuous grazing during summer and autumn. The second hypothesis tested was that without hand feeding, 10 dry sheep equivalents/ha would be able to at least maintain weight and condition score during summer and autumn. The third hypothesis tested was that rotational grazing would improve the production of the sheep (liveweight and condition score) compared with continuous grazing. The first hypothesis was rejected, the population of tedera plants did not significantly decline due to being continuously grazed during summer and autumn. The second hypothesis was confirmed, at the three experimental sites, 10 dry sheep equivalents/ha were able to at least maintain weight and condition score without any hand feeding. The third hypothesis was partially rejected; continuous grazing had a better performance of the sheep than rotational grazing. However, the rotational grazing plots had more tedera on offer in the remaining grazing plots in the rotation with the potential for a longer grazing time. These three experiments clearly demonstrate that tedera can be used to reduce or eliminate expensive hand feeding during summer and autumn using the simplest and least expensive grazing management; continuous grazing.


1985 ◽  
Vol 25 (2) ◽  
pp. 434 ◽  
Author(s):  
DS Petterson ◽  
JE Peterson ◽  
LW Smith ◽  
PM Wood ◽  
CCJ Culvenor

Samples of seed from commercial crops of Lupinus spp. in three States were tested for the presence of phomopsin, the causative agent of lupinosis. Each of 43 samples was tested in one of two laboratories using a nursling rat bioassay, and 12 of these were tested in both. Factors that could affect reproducibility of the assay were examined. There was good agreement in assessments of toxicity between laboratories. The efficiency of extraction was found to vary from about 15% at low concentrations of phomopsin to no more than 60%. Phomopsin was detected in 17 of the 43 samples, at levels ranging from < 6 �g/kg to 360 �g/kg. Phomopsis leptostromiformis infection was detected in 25 of 31 samples of seed from Western Australia, the highest infection level being 18%. The highest levels of phomopsin were found in samples with more than 8% infection.


2002 ◽  
Vol 53 (8) ◽  
pp. 919 ◽  
Author(s):  
F. H. Bradley ◽  
R. N. Oram ◽  
K. W. Malafant

Brown spot (BS) is a damaging disease of narrow-leafed lupins (Lupinus angustifolius L.), particularly in Western Australia. Breeding for resistance to the causal agent [Pleiochaeta setosa (Kirchn.) Hughes] has had some success. Here, earlier data on the extent and inheritance of resistance to BS are presented as a possible guide for future breeding programs. In 1980, 236 Mediterranean wild accessions from the Australian germplasm collection, and 17 cultivars and 20 breeding lines of L. angustifolius and L. albus L., were tested by natural infection in replicated short rows at 2 sites in southern New South Wales. The area of lower leaves covered by lesions was up to 70% lower on partially resistant lines than on commercial cultivars. Twelve wild accessions were consistently more resistant than 5 cultivars at Wagga Wagga in 1980 and in 2 subsequent years, in which 66 wild lines and 6 cultivars were tested. However, the rankings at Wagga Wagga differed from those in coastal Western Australia, suggesting that spatial differences occur in the pathotype composition of the fungus. The absence of sexual reproduction in the fungus suggests that its pathotype spectrum would change only slowly at each location. Unimodal distributions of BS scores for individual plants were found in the F2 of Illyarrie (susceptible) � CPI 67877 (resistant) and in the backcross to Illyarrie. The F2 mean was intermediate between the 2 parental means, and only a few plants had a score as low as the resistant parent. The regression of the mean scores for 15 F2 families from crosses among 7 wild lines, and between these and 2 susceptible cultivars, on the respective mid-parent values gave a narrow-sense heritability estimate of 0.94 ± 0.17 on a family mean basis. Thus, resistance was controlled by many loci with co-dominant alleles and should be robust. There was no linkage of resistance genes to the low alkaloid or white flower/green plant loci. Assuming the absence of dominance, the upper limit of narrow-sense heritability on a single plant basis was 0.50 ± 0.13. Several rounds of selection of partially resistant individuals in F2 families and intercrossing among F3 plants from many different wild � domesticated crosses are likely to produce cultivars with much more resistance than those now available. The applicability of the results at Wagga Wagga to the eastern wheatbelt of Western Australia, where BS is acute, and optimum field selection procedures are discussed.


1975 ◽  
Vol 26 (3) ◽  
pp. 567 ◽  
Author(s):  
TW Knight ◽  
CM Oldham ◽  
DR Lindsay

The dietary supplementation of groups of 200 ewes with lupins (0.23 or 0.45 kg per head per day) just prior to and during joining increased the ovulation rate by 8–25 ovulations per 100 ewes and the number of lambs born increased by 5–23 lambs per 100 ewes joined. The increase in the number of lambs born had two components: (i) an increase in number of ewes lambing and (ii) an increase in the number of twin births. Another study suggested that feeding the lupin supplement during joining gave larger increases in the reproductive performance of the ewes, especially in number of ewes lambing, than feeding the supplement of lupins before joining. The increases in reproductive performance following lupin supplementation were not associated with differences or changes in body weight or with differences in the rate of wool growth. The feeding of a barley + urea + mineral supplement that provided 25% more digestible energy than the lupin supplement and similar nitrogen levels, but with 50% of the nitrogen in the form of urea, resulted in no increase in the reproductive performance of the ewes.


1985 ◽  
Vol 25 (1) ◽  
pp. 164 ◽  
Author(s):  
PM Wood ◽  
DS Petterson

Samples of seed from commercial crops of Lupinus spp. in Western Australia were tested over a 6-year period (1976-8 1) for levels of infection by Phomopsis leptostromiformis. Of the 584 samples tested, 49% were not infected and a further 43% had <4% infection. Overall the levels of infection were higher than those previously recorded in this State. There was a highly significant effect of rainfall zone (P<0.001) on infection level. After accounting for this, there was no significant effect of cultivar, year, or growing zone. The method used was compared with that of Ali et al. (Australian Journal of Experimental Agriculture and Animal Husbandry, 1982, 22, 190-3). No significant differences between the two methods in assessment of lupin seed were observed.


1988 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 6
Author(s):  
BB Zahran ◽  
AM Holm ◽  
WR Stern ◽  
WA Loneragan

The cage method of sampling vegetation was used to estimate herbage mass and herbage consumed by sheep, grazing a pasture dominated by annual species, near Camawon, Western Australia. Using paired quadrats (2m x lm), one caged and the other open, herbage mass and herbage consumed were measured at five stocking rates on two soil types, on eight occasions between December 1983 and January 1985. The data were highly variable; nevertheless, some effects of season, soil type and stocking rate could be observed. The results showed clear seasonal trends. Some soil type x stocking rate interactions were detected during the dry periods of the year when herbage mass was low. Generally, the cage method tended to over-estimate herbage consuped. Sheep consumed approximately 119 to 116 of the available herbage at low and high stocking rates respectively when feed was plentiful; when feed was in short supply the corresponding figures were approximately 113 and 1/2. The limitations of the method are discussed and some suggestions made concerning its applicability in rangeland studies.


1989 ◽  
Vol 29 (1) ◽  
pp. 43 ◽  
Author(s):  
WA Cowling ◽  
PM Wood

Resistance to Phomopsis stem and pod blight, caused by Phomopsis leptostromiformis (Knhn) Bubak, in narrow-leafed lupin (Lupinus angustifolius L.) was consistently expressed at 5 sites in the southwest of Western Australia and 5 sites in south-eastern Australia in 1984. There was a high correlation (r = 0.95, P< 0.001) of mean Phomopsis stem ratings on the 8 breeding lines and 2 cultivars between the 2 regions of southern Australia. The mean frequency of seed infection by P. leptostromiformis in 6 resistant lines in Western Australia ranged from 0.1 to 1.0% compared with 1.4% in 75A65-5 (a line with intermediate resistance) and 2.0% in Yandee and Chittick (susceptible cultivars). In south-eastern Australia, mean seed infection in 6 resistant lines ranged from 0.0-0.6% compared with 2.3% in 75A65-5, 1.6% in Yandee, and 1.1% in Chittick. There was also a correlation (r = 0.73, P < 0.05) of mean seed infection levels in the 8 lines and 2 cultivars between the regions. Pod blight occurred at significantly lower frequency in resistant lines than in susceptible cultivars at 3 sites in Western Australia where pod lesions were visible. Correlations among Phomopsis stem ratings, pod blight severity, and the frequency of seed infection among lines and cultivars were significantly positive in all comparisons at individual sites and when averaged across the 2 regions of southern Australia.


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