ungrazed plot
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1994 ◽  
Vol 42 (6) ◽  
pp. 607 ◽  
Author(s):  
CHA Wahren ◽  
WA Papst ◽  
RJ Williams

Changes in vegetation composition and structure are described for grassland and heathland communities on the Bogong High Plains, in the Victorian Alpine National Park. The data are based on long-term records collected from permanent reference plots over the period 1945 to 1994 from plots established in 1945, 1946 and 1979. In the Pretty Valley grassland plots, established in 1946, cattle grazing has prevented the large-scale regeneration of a number of tall, palatable forbs and short, palatable shrubs, while in the absence of grazing, the cover of these Life forms increased substantially. The amount of bare ground and loose litter was significantly greater on the grazed compared with the ungrazed plot. Between 1979 and 1994, there was little or no identifiable trend in the cover of Vegetation or bare ground at either the Pretty Valley grazed site, or two additional grazed grassland sites established nearby in 1979. The current condition of grazed grassland on the Bogong High Plains is interpreted as stable, yet degraded. Improvement in condition will occur in the absence of grazing. In the Rocky Valley open heathland plots, established in 1945, increases in shrub cover over the study period were due to growth of shrubs following the 1939 bushfires that burnt much of the Bogong High Plains. From 1945-1979 shorter-lived shrubs increased in cover; since 1979, these shrubs have senesced, and are being replaced mainly by grasses. On the grazed plot longer lived, taller shrubs have continued to increase in cover and are not senescing. Between 1979 and 1989, total shrub cover declined on the ungrazed plot, but increased on the grazed plot. There was no evidence that grazing has reduced shrub cover, and therefore potential fire risk, in open heathland. These findings have significant management implications for the Alpine National Park and are consistent with those from other regions in the Australian alps.


1966 ◽  
Vol 46 (4) ◽  
pp. 433-439
Author(s):  
D. B. Wilson ◽  
R. D. Clark ◽  
S. Dubetz

Nitrogen fertilizer was applied at various rates and times to an irrigated grass–legume pasture grazed by sheep at Lethbridge. Mean herbage yields were 4257, 5247, 5847, 6269, and 6446 lb D.M./acre where 0, 1, 2, 3, and 4 fifty-pound applications of N/acre were made annually.Sheep weight gains were 358, 406, 467, 504, and 530 lb/acre under these same fertilizer treatments. Early season applications gave the greatest response per unit of N. The effect on yield of a 50-lb/acre application was largely dissipated within 30–40 days. Daily gain, daily dry matter consumption by the sheep, and T.D.N. content of the herbage were similar under all fertilizing treatments.Three different techniques of harvesting herbage from ungrazed plots were compared with harvesting from caged areas within the grazed plots. The best estimate of cage yields was obtained with a technique in which herbage cut from the ungrazed plot was returned as a mulch to decompose. The standard clip-plot procedure with the herbage discarded did not give a good estimate of cage yields though the estimate was improved when cattle manure was applied each spring to replace part of the nutrients removed in the harvested herbage.


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