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      Potential of legume-based grassland–livestock systems in Europe: a review

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          Abstract

          European grassland-based livestock production systems face the challenge of producing more meat and milk to meet increasing world demands and to achieve this using fewer resources. Legumes offer great potential for achieving these objectives. They have numerous features that can act together at different stages in the soil–plant–animal–atmosphere system, and these are most effective in mixed swards with a legume proportion of 30–50%. The resulting benefits include reduced dependence on fossil energy and industrial N-fertilizer, lower quantities of harmful emissions to the environment (greenhouse gases and nitrate), lower production costs, higher productivity and increased protein self-sufficiency. Some legume species offer opportunities for improving animal health with less medication, due to the presence of bioactive secondary metabolites. In addition, legumes may offer an adaptation option to rising atmospheric CO 2 concentrations and climate change. Legumes generate these benefits at the level of the managed land-area unit and also at the level of the final product unit. However, legumes suffer from some limitations, and suggestions are made for future research to exploit more fully the opportunities that legumes can offer. In conclusion, the development of legume-based grassland–livestock systems undoubtedly constitutes one of the pillars for more sustainable and competitive ruminant production systems, and it can be expected that forage legumes will become more important in the future.

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          An Earth-system perspective of the global nitrogen cycle.

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            The Ecological Consequences of Changes in Biodiversity: A Search for General Principles

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              Diversity enhances agricultural productivity via rhizosphere phosphorus facilitation on phosphorus-deficient soils.

              Intercropping, which grows at least two crop species on the same pieces of land at the same time, can increase grain yields greatly. Legume-grass intercrops are known to overyield because of legume nitrogen fixation. However, many agricultural soils are deficient in phosphorus. Here we show that a new mechanism of overyielding, in which phosphorus mobilized by one crop species increases the growth of a second crop species grown in alternate rows, led to large yield increases on phosphorus-deficient soils. In 4 years of field experiments, maize (Zea mays L.) overyielded by 43% and faba bean (Vicia faba L.) overyielded by 26% when intercropped on a low-phosphorus but high-nitrogen soil. We found that overyielding of maize was attributable to below-ground interactions between faba bean and maize in another field experiment. Intercropping with faba bean improved maize grain yield significantly and above-ground biomass marginally significantly, compared with maize grown with wheat, at lower rates of P fertilizer application ( 112.5 kg of P(2)O(5) per hectare). By using permeable and impermeable root barriers, we found that maize overyielding resulted from its uptake of phosphorus mobilized by the acidification of the rhizosphere via faba bean root release of organic acids and protons. Faba bean overyielded because its growth season and rooting depth differed from maize. The large increase in yields from intercropping on low-phosphorus soils is likely to be especially important on heavily weathered soils.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Grass Forage Sci
                Grass Forage Sci
                gfs
                Grass and Forage Science
                BlackWell Publishing Ltd (Oxford, UK )
                0142-5242
                1365-2494
                June 2014
                16 April 2014
                : 69
                : 2
                : 206-228
                Affiliations
                [* ]Agroscope, Institute for Sustainability Sciences Zurich, Switzerland
                []School of Agriculture, Policy and Development, University of Reading Reading, UK
                []INRA, Grassland Ecosystem Research Clermont-Ferrand, France
                [§ ]Scotland's Rural College Edinburgh, UK
                []INRA, UMR PEGASE St Gilles, France
                Author notes
                Correspondence to: Dr Andreas Lüscher, Agroscope, Institute for Sustainability Sciences, 8046 Zurich, Switzerland., E-mail: andreas.luescher@ 123456agroscope.admin.ch
                Article
                10.1111/gfs.12124
                4540161
                26300574
                4e18a62f-013f-4262-97bf-b6b1ab4227d0
                Copyright © 2014 John Wiley & Sons Ltd

                This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs License, which permits use and distribution in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited, the use is non-commercial and no modifications or adaptations are made.

                History
                : 18 December 2013
                : 15 March 2014
                Categories
                Review

                yield,symbiotic n2 fixation,forage quality,animal performance,greenhouse gas emission,nitrate leaching,animal health,climate change,energy,plant secondary metabolites,management,bloat,helminths,tannins

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