2019
DOI: 10.1071/cp19063
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Prospects for improving perennial legume persistence in mixed grazed pastures of south-eastern Australia, with particular reference to white clover

Abstract: This review examines the prospect of improving perennial legume adaptation to grazed mixed pasture swards across the higher-altitude regions of south-eastern Australia through improved management, particularly as it relates to soil fertility. The range of adapted perennial species available to farmers often remains limited to only one perennial forage legume species, white clover (Trifolium repens L.). Despite recent advances in cultivars for increased persistence in dryland environments, white clover remains … Show more

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Cited by 23 publications
(29 citation statements)
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References 182 publications
(212 reference statements)
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“…Barriers to adoption of L. corniculatus in New Zealand were listed by Chapman et al (1990) as being associated with establishment (appropriate and successful inoculation with rhizobia), and inappropriate grazing management. Under Australian conditions L. corniculatus has not persisted well compared to other adapted species (Hayes et al 2023).…”
Section: Lotusmentioning
confidence: 94%
“…Barriers to adoption of L. corniculatus in New Zealand were listed by Chapman et al (1990) as being associated with establishment (appropriate and successful inoculation with rhizobia), and inappropriate grazing management. Under Australian conditions L. corniculatus has not persisted well compared to other adapted species (Hayes et al 2023).…”
Section: Lotusmentioning
confidence: 94%
“…Soil acidity in a field environment can often be difficult to disentangle from other soil fertility properties because many acidic soils also have low fertility (Hayes et al 2019). Low fertility in acidic soils can be caused directly or indirectly by soil acidity (Hayes et al 2022), or can exist simply as an association due to factors such as the parent material from which the soil was derived.…”
Section: Response To Soil Acidity and Fertilitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Trifolium subterraneum and Trifolium ambiguum are two species that have become popular to use in drought-prone pastoral systems of Australasia and North America ( Knight et al, 1982 ; Virgona and Dear, 1996 ; Reed et al, 2001 ; Nichols et al, 2013 ; Hayes et al, 2020 ). Trifolium subterraneum , known as “subterranean clover” or “sub clover,” is an annual forage legume species of clover native to the Mediterranean region and western Asia.…”
Section: Role Of Trifolium Species In New Zealand Pastoral Systemsmentioning
confidence: 99%