Boletim de Indústria Animal (Oct 2015)

Management of production fields of common Urochloa humidicola seeds. II. Effect of culture practices.

  • Francisco Humberto Dübben de Souza,
  • Roberto Molinari Peres,
  • José Luiz Viana Coutinho Filho,
  • Célio Luiz Justo

DOI
https://doi.org/10.17523/bia.v72n3p209
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 72, no. 3
pp. 209 – 220

Abstract

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Since the 1970s, common Urochloa (syn. Brachiaria) humidicola seeds have been an important part of the Brazilian market of cultivated tropical pasture seeds. Most of these seeds come from pasture areas in which animals are excluded from spring to harvest in summer. Commercial productivity is low and variable, especially because of the lack of appropriate management of seed production. Production is impaired in heterogenous lawns in terms of ground cover, height and constitution. An automatic harvester is the most widely used harvesting method, which is known to be inefficient in recovering the seeds produced. The use of this equipment is also limited in this species by the strong association between flowering synchronization and natural seedfall, which results in a short period of attachment of the seeds to the inflorescences. Thus, this harvesting method can only be used for 5-7 days during each harvest. The anticipation or delay of the reproductive phase of plants obtained by distinct agronomic management may permit the temporal distribution of production during the same harvest. The objective of this study was to evaluate the effects of cultural practices on the productivity, quality and harvest window of common U. humidicola seeds. The effects of cutting height (5 and 15 cm above ground level, respectively, and control [uncut plants]), associated or not with the removal or burning of resulting plant residues, were evaluated in an area previously used as pasture in 1999/2000 and 2001/2002. Compared to control, the treatments resulted in delays during the harvest window of pure germinable seeds. The accumulation of biomass consisting of leaf remnants and dead or sterile tillers and their segments reduces the production of pure germinable seeds in common U. humidicola. The effect of the type of elimination of this accumulated material depends on the amount accumulated. However, in the two years of the experiment, cutting the plants at 5 cm above ground level at the beginning of the rainy season, followed by removal of these plant residues, increased the production of pure germinable seeds.

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