Full TGIF Record # 8063
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Web URL(s):https://academic.oup.com/aob/article/57/5/709/138036
    Last checked: 02/27/2017
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Publication Type:
i
Refereed
Author(s):Davidson, I. A.; Robson, M. J.
Author Affiliation:The Animal and Grassland Research Institute
Title:Effect of temperature and nitrogen supply on the growth of perennial ryegrass and white clover 2. A comparison of monocultures and mixed swards
Source:Annals of Botany. Vol. 57, No. 5, May 1986, p. 709-719.
Publishing Information:London, Oxford University Press
Keywords:TIC Keywords: Trifolium repens; Lolium perenne; Competition; Temperatures; Nitrogen
Abstract/Contents:"White clover (Trifolium repens L.) and Perennial ryegrass (Lolium perenne L.) plants were grown, in Perlite, in simulated swards as either monocultures or mixtures of equal plants numbers. They were supplied with a nutrient solution either high (220 ug g-1) or low (40 ug g-1) in 15N-labeled nitrate and grown to ceiling yield at either high (20 d C day/15 d C night) or low (10 d C day/8 d C night) temperature. Temperature had little effect on the maximum rates of gross canopy photosynthesis which were similar in High-N and High N and Low-N clover monocultures. However these maxima were reached more slowly in clover than grass, and more slowly at low rather than high temperature. Nitrogen supply increaed photosynthesis in grass but not in clover. Clover had higher N contents than grass in all four treatments, although in any given treatment its N content was lower, and contribution of N2-fixation relative to nitrate uptake higher, in mixture than in monoculture. Conversely, grass had higher N contents in mixture than monoculture, because more nitrate was available per plant and not because of transfer of biologically fixed N from clover. Under Low-N, clover outyielded grass in mixture, particularly at high temperature. The grass plants in the Low-N mixtures had higher N contents and higher SLA, LAR and shoot:root ratios than those in monoculture. It is proposed that competition for light is the cause of the low relative yield and negative aggressivity of grass in these sward. Under High-N, grass outyielded clover in monoculture and mixture, at both temperatures but particularly at low temperature when grass had a high aggressivity. Nitrogen and yield component analyses shed no light on clover's apparently low competitive ability and evidence is drawn from the previous paper to demonstrate that grass grew faster than clover only as spaced individuals during non-competitive growth. The relative merits of measures of competitive ability based on final harvest data and physiological data taken over a growth period are discussed."
Language:English
References:25
Note:Tables
Figures
ASA/CSSA/SSSA Citation (Crop Science-Like - may be incomplete):
Davidson, I. A., and M. J. Robson. 1986. Effect of temperature and nitrogen supply on the growth of perennial ryegrass and white clover 2. A comparison of monocultures and mixed swards. Ann. Bot. 57(5):p. 709-719.
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https://academic.oup.com/aob/article/57/5/709/138036
    Last checked: 02/27/2017
    Requires: PDF Reader
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