TY - JOUR
T1 - Do agricultural grasses bred for improved root systems provide resilience to machinery-derived soil compaction?
AU - Muhandiram Walawwe, Nuwan
AU - Humphreys, Mike
AU - Fychan, Rhun
AU - Davies, John
AU - Sanderson, Ruth
AU - Marley, Christina
N1 - Funding Information:
We thank the Agriculture and Horticulture Development Board (AHDB) Dairy, UK for funding this PhD studentship as part of the SUREROOT project ( www.sureroot.uk ), a BBSRC‐LINK (2014‐2019) Programme (BB/L009889/1), which includedthe following partners: North Wyke Rothamsted Research, British Grassland Society, Hybu Cig Cymru, Müller Milk and Ingredients, Mole Valley Farmers, Dalehead Foods, Gressingham Foods, Coombe Farm, Waitrose, Dovecote Park, BQP, Germinal GB, and Stonegate. The authors sincerely thank Vince Theobald, Mark Scott, Jan Newman, and all staff in analytical chemistry at IBERS for their assistance with this research. IBERS receives strategic funding from BBSRC, UKRI.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 The Authors. Food and Energy Security published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd. and the Association of Applied Biologists.
PY - 2020/8/25
Y1 - 2020/8/25
N2 - The increasing frequency of droughts and floods on grasslands, due to climate change, increases the risk of soil compaction. Soil compaction affects both soil and forage productivity. Differing grasses may counteract some effects of compaction due to differences in their root architecture and ontogeny. To compare their resilience to soil compaction, three Festulolium (ryegrass and fescue species’ hybrids) forage grass cultivars comprising differing root architecture and ontogeny were compared in replicated field plots, together with a ryegrass and tall fescue variety as controls. Pre-compaction soil and forage properties were determined in spring using > four-year-old plots to generate baseline data. Half of each field plot was then artificially compacted using farm machinery. Forage dry matter yield (DMY) was determined over four cuts. After the final harvest, post compaction soil characteristics and root biomass (RB) were compared between grasses in the non-compacted and compacted soils. Pre-compaction data showed that soil under Festulolium and ryegrass had similar water infiltration rates, higher than soil under tall fescue plots. Tiller density of the Festulolium at this time was significantly higher than fescue but not the ryegrass control. Forage DMY was significantly lower (p <.001) with compacted soil at the first cut but, by the completion of the growing season, there was no effect of soil compaction on total DMY. Tall fescue had a higher total DMY than other grasses, which all produced similar annual yields. Soil bulk density and penetration resistance were higher, and grass tiller density was lower in compacted soils. Root biomass in compacted soils showed a tendency for Festulolium cv Lp × Fg to have higher RB than the ryegrass at 0–15 cm depth. Overall, findings showed alternative grass root structures provide differing resilience to machinery compaction, and root biomass production can be encouraged without negative impacts on forage productivity.
AB - The increasing frequency of droughts and floods on grasslands, due to climate change, increases the risk of soil compaction. Soil compaction affects both soil and forage productivity. Differing grasses may counteract some effects of compaction due to differences in their root architecture and ontogeny. To compare their resilience to soil compaction, three Festulolium (ryegrass and fescue species’ hybrids) forage grass cultivars comprising differing root architecture and ontogeny were compared in replicated field plots, together with a ryegrass and tall fescue variety as controls. Pre-compaction soil and forage properties were determined in spring using > four-year-old plots to generate baseline data. Half of each field plot was then artificially compacted using farm machinery. Forage dry matter yield (DMY) was determined over four cuts. After the final harvest, post compaction soil characteristics and root biomass (RB) were compared between grasses in the non-compacted and compacted soils. Pre-compaction data showed that soil under Festulolium and ryegrass had similar water infiltration rates, higher than soil under tall fescue plots. Tiller density of the Festulolium at this time was significantly higher than fescue but not the ryegrass control. Forage DMY was significantly lower (p <.001) with compacted soil at the first cut but, by the completion of the growing season, there was no effect of soil compaction on total DMY. Tall fescue had a higher total DMY than other grasses, which all produced similar annual yields. Soil bulk density and penetration resistance were higher, and grass tiller density was lower in compacted soils. Root biomass in compacted soils showed a tendency for Festulolium cv Lp × Fg to have higher RB than the ryegrass at 0–15 cm depth. Overall, findings showed alternative grass root structures provide differing resilience to machinery compaction, and root biomass production can be encouraged without negative impacts on forage productivity.
KW - Festulolium
KW - forage yield
KW - roots
KW - ryegrass
KW - soil compaction
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85087447101&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1002/fes3.227
DO - 10.1002/fes3.227
M3 - Article
C2 - 32999718
SN - 2048-3694
VL - 9
JO - Food and Energy Security
JF - Food and Energy Security
IS - 3
M1 - e227
ER -