Higher yield and fewer weeds in grass/legume mixtures than in monocultures - results from the first year at 20 sites of COST action 852

J. A. Finn, G. Belanger, M. Jorgensen, B. E. Frankow-Lindberg, P. Golinski, Mick Fothergill, A. Ghesquiere, Aslaug Helgadottir, Z. Kadziuliene, L. Kirwan, F. P. O'Mara, R. J. Wilkins, L. 't Mannetje, D. K. Lovett, P. A. M. Rogers, T. M. Boland

Research output: Working paper

Abstract

Utilisation of grass/legume mixtures instead of grass monocultures is a sensible alternative for low input, efficient agricultural systems that reduce production costs, promote environmental policy and maintain a living countryside. Consequently, widely adapted forage legumes will become increasingly important. Instability of simple grass / legume mixtures with only one grass and one legume species is a major problem (Wachendorf et al., 2001), An experiment was established in 39 sites in Europe, Australia and Canada within COST Action 852 to: (1) assess the benefits of grass / legume mixtures in terms of forage production, (2) test whether the combination of fast and slow-growing species improves the stability of the mixtures and (3) assess response patterns over a large environmental gradient.
Original languageEnglish
PublisherWageningen Academic Publishers
Publication statusPublished - 2005

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