Journal article
Summer drought survival and recovery in Microlaena stipoides
ML Mitchell, JM Virgona, JL Jacobs, DR Kemp
Rangeland Journal | CSIRO PUBLISHING | Published : 2016
DOI: 10.1071/RJ16005
Abstract
Microlaena stipoides (microlaena) is an important perennial grass in over 7million hectares of native pastures in southern Australia and can survive and persist despite severe soil water deficits during summer. Many other pasture species survive similar conditions by relying on summer dormancy, which raises the possibility that microlaena may behave similarly. A field experiment using rainout shelters was conducted on an existing microlaena pasture in north-east Victoria. The experiment was a split-plot design with two watering treatments ('summer storm' or 'summer dry') as main plots and three defoliation treatments (nil, intense defoliation, strategic defoliation) as subplots. The 'summer ..
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Funding Acknowledgements
Funding for this research was provided by a Charles Sturt University Postgraduate Research Scholarship, Future Farming Industries CRC, AW Howard Memorial Trust Fellowship and the Department of Economic Development, Jobs, Transport and Resources. The authors thank Wayne Dempsey and Ken Wilson for providing technical assistance, Ann Cowling for assistance with biometric analyses and Rob Brown for useful critique of the paper.