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      Grass–legume mixtures sustain strong yield advantage over monocultures under cool maritime growing conditions over a period of 5 years

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          Abstract

          Background and Aims

          Grassland-based livestock systems in cool maritime regions are commonly dominated by grass monocultures receiving relatively high levels of fertilizer. The current study investigated whether grass–legume mixtures can improve the productivity, resource efficiency and robustness of yield persistence of cultivated grassland under extreme growing conditions over a period of 5 years.

          Methods

          Monocultures and mixtures of two grasses ( Phleum pratense and Festuca pratensis) and two legumes ( Trifolium pratense and Trifolium repens), one of which was fast establishing and the other temporally persistent, were sown in a field trial. Relative abundance of the four species in the mixtures was systematically varied at sowing. The plots were maintained under three N levels (20, 70 and 220 kg N ha –1 year –1) and harvested twice a year for five consecutive years. Yields of individual species and interactions between all species present were modelled to estimate the species diversity effects.

          Key Results

          Significant positive diversity effects in all individual years and averaged across the 5 years were observed. Across years, the four-species equi-proportional mixture was 71 % (N20: 20 kg N ha –1 year –1) and 51 % (N70: 70 kg N ha –1 year –1) more productive than the average of monocultures, and the highest yielding mixture was 36 % (N20) and 39 % (N70) more productive than the highest yielding monoculture. Importantly, diversity effects were also evident at low relative abundances of either species group, grasses or legumes in the mixture. Mixtures suppressed weeds significantly better than monocultures consistently during the course of the experiment at all N levels.

          Conclusions

          The results show that even in the less productive agricultural systems in the cool maritime regions grass–legume mixtures can contribute substantially and persistently to a more sustainable agriculture. Positive grass–legume interactions suggest that symbiotic N 2 fixation is maintained even under these marginal conditions, provided that adapted species and cultivars are used.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Ann Bot
          Ann. Bot
          annbot
          Annals of Botany
          Oxford University Press (US )
          0305-7364
          1095-8290
          August 2018
          22 May 2018
          01 August 2019
          : 122
          : 2
          : 337-348
          Affiliations
          [1 ]Agricultural University of Iceland, Árleyni, Reykjavik, Iceland
          [2 ]Forage Production and Grassland Systems, Agroscope, Reckenholzstrasse, Zürich, Switzerland
          Author notes
          For correspondence. E-mail aslaug@ 123456lbhi.is
          Article
          PMC6070104 PMC6070104 6070104 mcy074
          10.1093/aob/mcy074
          6070104
          29790908
          a240b502-32f9-4cf4-aabc-a7d2498eed9c
          © The Author(s) 2018. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Annals of Botany Company. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.

          This article is published and distributed under the terms of the Oxford University Press, Standard Journals Publication Model ( https://academic.oup.com/journals/pages/open_access/funder_policies/chorus/standard_publication_model)

          History
          : 03 September 2017
          : 20 April 2018
          : 29 January 2018
          Page count
          Pages: 12
          Funding
          Funded by: Icelandic Research
          Award ID: 130383-051
          Categories
          Original Articles

          legumes,Diversity effect,transgressive overyielding,symbiotic N2 fixation,sward composition,mixtures,marginal growing conditions,weed invasion,grasses

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