Rangeland Ecology & Management

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Pasture development during brush clearing with sheep and goats.
Author
Dabaan, M. Essam
Magadlea, Andrew M.
Bryan, William B.
Arbogast, Barbara L.
Prigge, Edward C.
Flores, Gonzalo
Skousen, Jeffrey G.
Publisher
Society for Range Management
Publication Year
1997
Body

Knowing that sheep or goats can be used to control brush we quantified pasture changes during and after brush control. Over an 8-year period we measured the effects of control (no soil amendment), medium soil amendment (4,500 kg lime and 40 kg P ha-1), and high soil amendment (9,000 kg lime and 117 kg P ha-1) on soil fertility, pasture botanical composition and production of brushy pasture grazed by sheep or goats. Botanical composition was estimated from clipped samples. Soil pH was 4.8 in the control, 6.5 in the medium and 7.0 in the high amendment plots. Medium and high amendment increased legume dry matter in the pasture from 2 in the check to 8%. More animal grazing days were obtained on paddocks treated with lime and P. Grazing with sheep or goats and lime and application of P resulted, after 4 years, in pastures with a grass, legume, and other broadleaf plant composition similar to that of brush-free, natural pasture.

Language
English
Resource Type
Text
Document Type
Journal Issue/Article
Journal Volume
50
Journal Number
2
Journal Pages
p. 217-221.
Collection
Journal Name
Journal of Range Management
Keywords
liming
West Virginia
phosphorus fertilizers
brush control
soil pH
sheep
goats
botanical composition
application rate
forage legumes
grazing experiments
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