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Composition and digestibility during ageing of consecutive leaves on the main stem of Italian ryegrass plants, growing undisturbed or regrowing after cutting

✍ Scribed by Groot, Jeroen C?J; Neuteboom, Jan H; Deinum, Bauke


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1999
Tongue
English
Weight
111 KB
Volume
79
Category
Article
ISSN
0022-5142

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✦ Synopsis


For modelling of grass digestibility throughout the growing season, the impact of cutting on individual leaves needs to be quanti®ed. Therefore, a glasshouse experiment was carried out with Italian ryegrass (Lolium multi¯orum Lam) grown from seed. Half of the plants were grown undisturbed until leaf stage 8, while the other half were cut at leaf stage 4, after which they were allowed to grow until leaf stage 9. The composition and digestibility characteristics of leaves 6, 7 and 8 on the main shoot of plants from both treatments were quanti®ed. In the uncut plants, leaf blade length and mass and speci®c cell wall (CW) and organic matter (OM) mass (mg cm À2 ) was higher for consecutive leaves. During leaf ageing speci®c CW mass remained unchanged, while speci®c OM mass and CW digestibility declined, resulting in a decline of OM digestibility. CW digestibility of leaves decreased to c 78%, a value also found in an earlier experiment. The newly formed leaves after cutting had a reduced leaf size and speci®c leaf mass (SLM, mg DM cm À2 ). Leaf 6, that was damaged by cutting, showed a lower initial CW content and a rapid decline of speci®c CW and OM mass and of digestibility during ageing. Its low speci®c mass and digestibility of CW could have been related to cessation of CW synthesis during its growth after cutting, as was evidenced by the lower CW thickness of sclerenchyma cells. The later-formed leaves, 7 and 8, had digestibility characteristics similar to those of the uncut plants. Since leaf 6 hardly contributed to the total plant dry matter mass, the cut and the uncut plants differed only slightly in digestibility of the total leaf fraction. It can be concluded that cutting sets back leaf size and growth rate but has little effect on digestibility characteristics during ageing.