Forage brassicas can improve the feedbase and reduce feed gap risk across diverse environments in Australia

Dr Lucy Watt1, Dr Lindsay Bell2

1CSIRO, Brisbane, Australia, 2CSIRO, Toowoomba, Australia

Biography:

Lucy’s has a PhD from Charles Sturt University. Her main expertise is in ruminant livestock nutrition and health as well as forage crop and pasture agronomy and management. Since joining CSIRO in 2018 Lucy’s research has focussed on the role of forage brassicas in mixed farming systems. She has developed forage models to simulate forage-livestock systems and coupled these to predict animal health outcomes across multiple environments.

Abstract:

Spring-sown forage brassicas are commonly used to fill feed gaps in high rainfall temperate livestock systems, but they have wider potential as an autumn-sown forage in drier environments within Australia’s crop-livestock zone. We modelled the production potential of autumn-sown forage brassicas grown in diverse environments and tested their ability to alter the frequency and magnitude of feed gaps.

Long-term production potential was simulated in APSIM for four forage brassica genotypes, compared to forage wheat and dual-purpose canola across 22 diverse agro-climatic locations. For seven regions, the change in frequency and magnitude of forage deficits from adding forage brassicas to representative forage-livestock systems was also predicted. Across locations median yields of forage brassicas ranged from 7-19 t DM/ha, and their annual metabolisable energy yield was higher than forage wheat at most sites and nearly always exceeded dual-purpose canola. Forage brassicas performed better than forage wheat in later sowing events (late April to early May) and maintained growth and quality later into spring. At five of the seven regions, adding 15% of farm forage area to forage brassicas reduced the frequency and magnitude of feed deficits by 35-50% and 20-40%, respectively. However, they were less beneficial where winter-spring feed gaps are uncommon. We demonstrate that autumn-sown forage brassicas can be reliable and productive contributors to the feed base in drier environments and are a suitable alternative to forage cereals. Forage brassicas can help reduce feed gaps and improve livestock production in a range of production systems spanning Australia’s crop-livestock zone.