Title: Forage Management on Small Acreages
1Forage Management on Small Acreages
2Livestock Requirements
- Water
- Food
- Shelter
- Living area
3Agronomic Questions
- Soils - What do you have?
- Species selection - What do you want?
- Establishment - How do you get it?
- Weed control - How do you get rid of the other?
- Vegetation management - How do you keep it where
and when you want it and use it. - Ecology - How it all fits together.
4Soils
- First decision on species/variety selection
- Texture Clay, loam, silt, sand
- Chemical
- Physical
- Soil Test
- pH
- P K
- Nitrate (?)
5Species Selection
- Annual vs. Perennial
- Cool vs. Warm season
- Bunch vs Sod (grasses)
- Legume vs. Nonlegume (Forb)
- Native vs Naturalized
6Annual vs. Perennial
- Annual requires reseeding
- Greater seed production.. quick ground cover
- both cool and warm season available.
- Perennial- longer life, individual plants more
likely to survive, - Seed production varies, slower, but permanent
ground cover.
7Cool vs. Warm season
- Cool season forage growth in fall and early
spring, seed production in late spring and early
summer - Warm season forage growth in spring through the
summer, seed production from June to November
(very species dependent)
8Bunch vs Sod
- Sod grass prostrate, sod forming. higher ground
cover, but poorer infiltration. - Bunchgrass upright, tiller driven, lower ground
cover, better infiltration.
9Legume vs. Nonlegume
- Legumes Net nitrogen producers, generally very
high quality. Native and naturalized species
available - Nonlegumes Net nitrogen users forage quality
varies. Perennials are usually very deep rooted.
More warm season species available for use (?)
10Native vs Naturalized
- Native Acceptance by livestock not always known.
Most are not resistant to excessive defoliation.
Difficult to get quality seed - Naturalized Acceptant by livestock, many are
abuse tolerant. Seed sprig supply generally
plentiful and of good quality.
11Recommended Species
12Recommended Native Bunchgrasses
- Switchgrass (Alamo/Caddo)
- Indiangrass
- Big Bluestem
- Eastern Gamagrass (Pete)
- Little bluestem
- Sideoats grama
- Mixtures of the above
13Recommended Naturalized Bunchgrasses
- Johnsongrass
- Kleingrass
- Caucasion Bluestems
- Lovegrass
- Tall Fescue (?)
- Bluegrass (?)
14Sod grasses
- Buffalo
- Bermuda
- Dallis
- Bahia (?)
15Annual crops
- Haygrazer, Millet
- Wheat, oats, rye and ryegrass
- Soybeans, cowpeas for forage
16 Native Naturalize Legumes
- Bluebonnet
- Illinois Bundleflower
- Mimosa
17Introduced Legumes
- Clovers
- White,
- Arrowleaf
- Crimson,
- Berseem,
- Other legumes
- Alfalfa,
- lespedezas Japanese, serecia, etc
18Establishment
- Species selection What to plant
- Planting Date
- Seeding Rate How much
- Seeding Depth How deep to water
- Planting Method
- Erosion control
- Fertilization What is needed
- Weed Control Reduce Competition
19Species Selection
- Plant what fits your soil
- Determine the livestock you want
- Select native species that are found no more than
50 miles west and 100 miles north, south and east
(lots of exceptions) - What do you want? (qualitative)
- What can you afford (economic)
20Planting Date
- Cool season grasses and most forbs are planted in
the fall (Sept. - Nov.) some opportunity exists
for early spring (Feb 15 to March 15) plantings - Warm season grasses and some forbs are planted in
the spring (late March to late May). Plantings
after June 1 are risky without irrigation.
21Seeding Rate
- Species dependent Generally 20 to 80 K plants
desired per acre (1/2 to 4 plants/ft2) - Increase seeding rate as demands or hazards
increase - Decrease species seeding rate with mixture (total
seeding rate increases) - Seed quality dependent base seeding rate on pure
live seed calculations - PLS(germ hard seed)purity
22Seeding depth
- Best is planted to moisture (field cap.)
- Considerable species variation (switchgrass)
- The bigger the deeper
- (4 to 8) seed diameter
- 1/4 to 1/2 . Not more than 3/4
- many small seeded plants (lt 1/8 ) can be surface
planted, if soil moisture is or will be adequate.
23Planting Method
- Seedbed preparation
- Prepared Seedbed
- Sod or minimum till
- defoliation
- desiccation
- Seeding method
- drill
- drop
- broadcast
24Effect of planting and and light disking on
forage production by April 1 of ryegrass
overseeded on Bermudagrass, Winnsboro, LA
25Chemical Desiccation of Dallisgrass Sod
26Erosion Control
- gt60 ground cover required for erosion control
- Erosion is a storm event not a season event
- Prevention the steeper the slope closer to
water, the more important the effort - Use of a companion crop often advisable
- greensprangle top with bunchgrass
- Wheat or oats with white clover or alfalfa
27Liebergs Law of Limits
28Fertilization
- Grasses need nitrogen soon after germination
- Legumes need phosphorus
- Avoid nitrogen with legumes
- Species variation huge
- Both need K and other nutrients
- Soil test
29Weed Control
- Chemical
- and
- Non Chemical
30Life Cycle
- Annual Seed germinates, plant grows, flowers and
seeds out in one growing season (crabgrass) - Biennial Seed germinates, plant grows, then
reproduces in following year (onion) - Perennial Seed germinates, and plant lives and
reproduces for several years (bermudagrass)
31Keys to weed persistence
- Seed crop size
- Seed hardness
- Nutrient Reserve in the tap root
- Defenses (resistance to grazing)
32Weed Control Methods
- Chemical
- Mechanical
- Biological
- Crop Competition
- Crop Rotation
- Fire
33Chemical Weed Control
34Chemical Weed Control
35Mechanical Weed Control
- Burial
- Cultivation
- Mowing
36Burial
- Placing soil or mulch or other material over the
reproductive organ - Effective with seed
- Ineffective with plant parts (bulbs , rhizomes,
etc.) - Destroys perennial crop
37Cultivation
- Works in row planted crops, ineffective in
broadcasts - Destroys root system of weed
- Deep cultivation may hurt crop
- Deep cultivation may bring up buried weed seeds
- Expense (?)
38Mowing
- Effective on tall growing annual weeds (redroot
pigweed) - Ineffective on short growing perennial weeds
(dallisgrass) - Little benefit for current years forage program
- Timing is critical
39Biological
- Defoliation, desiccation of disease
- Insect No known control
- Mammals Possible
40Biological
41Biological
- Effectiveness determined by the preferred diet of
the vector (grazer) and susceptibility of target
weeds to predation (animal acceptability) and
defoliation - Economics varies with vector acquisition costs
and market value of vector
42Effect of N Rate, herbicide and covercrop on weed
production
43Crop Competition
- Long term solution
- Often the most economical
- Requires compatible and useable crops
- Maintenance of proper soil fertility levels is
required
44Crop Rotation
- Replacement of one crop with another
- Works best with annual crops
- Usually not economical in perennial forage crops
(bermudagrass) but may be feasible with alfalfa
or johnsongrass
45Fire
- Earliest recorded form of forage management
- Multiple benefits (residue removal, control of
spring weeds, increased infiltration) - Effective on young annual weeds
- Ineffective on many perennial weeds
- Timing is critical and target species dependent
46Fire
- Fuel load is critical
- 1500 lbs./ac minimum
- 3000 lbs./ac optimum
- Optimum weather conditions, winter headfire
- RH 25 - 40
- Air temp 70-80oF
- Wind speed 8 - 15 mph
47Fire
- Optimum weather conditions, winter backfires
- RH 40-60
- Air temp 40-60oF
- Wind speed 5 - 8 mph
- Minimum mineral fireline width
- 8 1/mph
48TACB Regulations for Prescribed Burns
- Wind speed 6-23 mph
- Burn period 9a - 5p
- Location outside city limits
- Border 300 ft from residential, commercial,
recreational or industrial properties - Burns cannot be conducted when air temperature
inversions are predicted
49Fire
- Red flag for winter burns
- Wind speedgt20 mph
- RHlt20
- air tempgt 80oF
- May damage crop plant
- VERY RISKY, HIGH LIABILITY
- Not recommended to most producers
50Prevention
- Minimize soil disturbance
- Keep fence lines, feed areas, etc. mowed
- Feed purchased hay and feed in weedy areas
- Keep wildlife crop (system) vigorous and
competitive
51Vegetation Management
- How to keep what you want, where you want it and
when you want it
52Why
- Livestock Diet Quantity and Quality
- Rejuvenation of the sward
- Germination of seeds
- Weed control
- Reduction of liability (fire, pest, etc.)
- Looks bad
53Forage
- Leaves age reducing quality and photosynthetic
efficiency - Bottom leaves are the oldest
- Nutrients transferred to seed and carbohydrate
reserve - best to maintain an LAI of 4-6
54Sward Rejuvenation
- Grasses and legumes require some defoliation for
sward health maintance. - Old plant die and litter prevents new plants from
establishing - Non defoliation leads to shrub and trees
dominating the system
55Seed Germination
- Seeds require infrared light to germinate
- Litter blocks infrared light
- Establish plants compete very effectively with
new seedling for light, water and other nutrients
56Weed Control
- Removal of undesirable plants
- Chemical and nonchemical methods to be used
57Liability
- Fire
- Vermin
- Disease
- Insect
- Weeds
58When to defoliate
- When conditions are favorable
- When target plants can afford to loss the
protection - When target seeds need to germinate
- Before livestock needs the forage
59Bermudagrass and Ryegrass Growth Curve
60Defoliation Methods
- Grazing/feeding requires adequate numbers
controllable vectors - Mowing leaves a residue
- Disking disturbs the soil
- improved seed germination
- erosion
- Fire complete residue removal
61Carbohydrate Management
- Carbohydrates (TNCs) are the products of
photosynthesis - Plant part removal and regrowth requires
utilization of TNCs. - Depletion of TNCsPlant death
- Reproductive organs are sites of TNCs
- Consumption and defoliation deplete Plant TNC
62Carbohydrate Management
- Consequently vegetation management is
Carbohydrate Management - Minimize TNC depletion of target plants
- Maximize TNC depletion of weeds
- Utilize growth curve knowledge for timing
- Keep forage vegetative for browsers/grazers
- Keep plant reproductive for seed
63Vegetation Management
- Goals
- Wildlife food and shelter
- Sward rejuvenation and restoration
- Results cross purposed goals
- Dont do all microsites within a wildlife unit
during the same time or at the same time each
year.
64Prairie Ecology
- Plant production
- Species
- Fertility
- Growth Curve
- Weather
- Reproduction
- Sward Compostion
- Animal production
- Requirement
- food
- water
- shelter
- living area
- Behavior
- Stocking rate
- Species
- Reproduction
- etc.
65Animal Production
66Ecology
- Balancing act
- What helps one hurts another
- Maximize niches
- Shelter areas
- Water areas
- Food areas
67Examples
- Long strips of Shelter belts surrounded by
foraging strips - Checkerboard alternating squares of forage and
shrub/ trees - Islands of shrubs/trees circled by forage
- Mixtures of tall and short grass
- Mixtures of adjacent mown and unmown plots
68Summary
- Maximize plant numbers and diversity over time
and space by carbohydrate management - Maximize animal numbers and diversity over time
and space by vegetation management - Start with a small number of target plants and
animal, increase over time