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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Oxford BSL : Blackwell Publishing Ltd
    Grass and forage science 53 (1998), S. 0 
    ISSN: 1365-2494
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: The effect of feeding a urea-based supplement for the last 8 weeks of pregnancy was examined on ewes grazing the grass-shrub steppes of NW Patagonia, Argentina. The productivity of ewes and lambs and the utilization rate of the major, less preferred, grass species (Stipa speciosa, 27% cover) was analysed. In a paddock-scale experiment, ewes grazed two areas of 450–500 ha from 15 August to 15 February at a stocking rate of 0·5 ewes ha−1. From 15 August to 10 October, one group of ewes was given access to a urea-based supplement containing 300 g kg−1 urea, 320 g kg−1 salt, 30 g kg−1 molasses and 300 g kg−1 bone meal. Average supplement consumption was 3·5 g ewe−1 d−1. The performance of 100 ewes in each of the two areas was evaluated. Supplemented ewes gained 4·2 kg more live weight than the control ewes between 15 August and 10 October (prepartum) (liveweight gain was 10·3 vs. 6·1 kg ewe−1, P 〈 0·05). The number of live lambs at 8 weeks of age, as a proportion of ewes mated, was 15% higher in the supplemented than in the control group (0·634 vs. 0·553, P 〈 0·05). A similar increase in the live weight of lambs at 8 weeks of age in the supplemented group compared with the controls was also observed (12·1 vs. 10·6 kg, P 〈 0·05). In the paddock with the supplemented ewes, there was a significant increase in the proportion of Stipa speciosa plants defoliated (0·62 vs. 0·38, P 〈 0·05) and in the intensity of defoliation of these plants. It was concluded that urea-based supplements increased productivity of ewes and that this was likely to be associated with an increase in the intake, and possibly digestibility, of the less preferred species such as Stipa speciosa.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1432-1939
    Keywords: Key words Patagonian steppe ; Water stress ; Percolation ; Aboveground net primary production
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract In the Patagonian steppe, years with above-average precipitation (wet years) are characterized by the occurrence of large rainfall events. The objective of this paper was to analyze the ability of shrubs and grasses to use these large events. Shrubs absorb water from the lower layers, grasses from the upper layers, intercepting water that would otherwise reach the layers exploited by shrubs. We hypothesized that both life-forms could use the large rainfalls and that the response of shrubs could be more affected by the presence of grasses than vice versa. We performed a field experiment using a factorial combination of water addition and life-form removal, and repeated it during the warm season of three successive years. The response variables were leaf growth, and soil and plant water potential. Grasses always responded to experimental large rainfall events, and their response was greater in dry than in wet years. Shrubs only used large rainfalls in the driest year, when the soil water potential in the deep layers was low. The presence or absence of one life-form did not modify the response of the other. The magnitude of the increase in soil water potential was much higher in dry than in humid years, suggesting an explanation for the differences among years in the magnitude of the response of shrubs and grasses. We propose that the generally reported poor response of deep-rooted shrubs to summer rainfalls could be because (1) the water is insufficient to reach deep soil layers, (2) the plants are in a dormant phenological status, and/or (3) deep soil layers have a high water potential. The two last situations may result in high deep-drainage losses, one of the most likely explanations for the elsewhere-reported low response of aboveground net primary production to precipitation during wet years.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 3
    ISSN: 1432-1939
    Keywords: Resource partitioning ; Steppe ; Water use ; Shrubs ; Patagonia
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary Experiments were conducted in the Patagonian steppe in southern South America to test the following hypotheses: (a) grasses take up most of the water from the upper layers of the soil and utilize frequent and short-duration pulses of water availability; (b) shrubs, on the contrary, take up most of the water from the lower layers of the soil and utilize infrequent and long-duration pulses of water availability. Grasses and shrubs were removed selectively and the performance of plants and the availability of soil resources were monitored. Results supported the overall hypothesis that grasses and shrubs in the Patagonian steppe use mainly different resources. Removal of shrubs did not alter grass production but removal of grasses resulted in a small increase in shrub production which was mediated by an increase in deep soil water and in shrub leaf water potential. The efficiency of utilization of resources freed by grass removal was approximately 25%. Shrubs used water exclusively from lower soil layers. Grasses took up most of the water from upper layers but they were also capable of absorbing water from deep layers. This pattern of water partitioning along with the lack of response in leaf nitrogen to the removal treatments suggested that shrubs may be at a disadvantage to grasses with respect to nutrient capture and led to questions about the role of nutrient recirculation, leaching, and nitrogen fixation in the steppe.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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