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Lincoln University agroforestry experiment findings
Don Mead and Dick Lucas
New Zealand Tree
Grower February 2008
Since the Lincoln University agroforestry experiment was established in
1990, over 30 scientific papers have been published. However, as most
of these have been in overseas journals where they are not readily
available to farm foresters in this country, we would like to present
some important highlights. Some of the results confirm findings from
Tikiteri and other work in
Australasia but other findings give new insights. They may offer
opportunities for enhancing farm forestry management.
The Lincoln University agroforestry experiment differs from other
radiata pine silvopastoral investigations in that we studied how
different pastures performed and interacted with radiata pine tree
growth at a constant final crop stocking of 200 stems per hectare. We
also compared several clones of radiata pine with seedlings. Our
research was on fertile arable soil on the Canterbury plains where
rainfall averages 660 mm a year and summer droughts are common. No
fertilisers or irrigation were applied.
Pasture productivity and grazing
Reasonable pasture productivity under the radiata pine, of about half
that of the open ground, was obtained for 12 to 13 years with a pruned
sawlog regime. This was similar to other research, such as at Tikiteri
near Rotorua. Dense crowns of radiata pine shaded out all pasture types
after mid-rotation. Therefore at 16 years the pastures under the trees
were receiving only 15 per cent to 18 per cent of the light in the open
while pine needle litter covered between 56 per cent and 98 per cent of
the ground. Clover, which was abundant in the first three years, was
almost gone after 10 years.

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| The effects of lucerne on tree growth age
three to four years. |
Pasture productivity was about 10 per cent lower than the open during
the first six years with the greatest reduction being with lucerne and
the least with clover. However, most of the difference was due to the
metre wide sprayed strip along the tree lines which occupied a seventh
of the area. As early as age three years, we found pasture productivity
close to the trees was being affected by the trees. By 10 to 11 years,
as the trees began to close canopy and light
intensity was about 50 per cent to 60 per cent of the open, the
productivity of cocksfoot and clover and the new lucerne sown in 1999
had decreased to about 65 per cent of the open. The 10-year-old
lucerne, sown when the trial was established, had about half the
productivity of the new lucerne at this time. However, that was
expected given the normal life of lucerne pasture in the district is
seven years.
Pasture nutrition
Lamb and ewe-hogget liveweight gains reflected the drop in pasture
productivity. From years three to six there was about a 20 per cent
reduction compared to the open and by age 10-11 years this had dropped
to about half the open. Pasture under the trees was marginally more
nutritious but this was offset by the drop in pasture bulk density due
to etiolation of the plants in the shade and reduced grass tiller and
lucerne stem numbers. It was thought that the reduced pasture density
reduced animal bite size and the daily animal feed intake. Therefore,
although stocking rates of sheep were based on dry matter production,
liveweight gains were less than half under tree shade compared to the
open pastures.
Using cocksfoot or lucerne
Cocksfoot was found to be more shade tolerant than lucerne. However, in
spite of its lower shade tolerance, lucerne had greater productivity
than cocksfoot and clover both in the open and under the trees. Lucerne
was always more nutritious than cocksfoot, particularly in the latter
years as the clover disappeared from the cocksfoot pasture. Studies
made between ages 9 and 11 years showed that the cocksfoot was
extremely nitrogen deficient and responded well to fertiliser. The
lucerne sown at age 9 years grew well under the trees, producing almost
10 tonnes per hectare of dry matter at age 10 and 11 years.
(top)
High producing lucerne
The results suggest that farm foresters should consider lucerne for
agroforestry blocks, despite it being less shade tolerant. It is high
producing and nutritious. It would be particularly valuable where
additional feed is required in spring and summer, but would not be
useful over winter as it is dormant during that time. It is also
drought tolerant.
However, lucerne
must be rotationally grazed or it rapidly becomes
weedy and declines in productivity. Grazing durations of seven to
10 days with a six week spell are recommended. As it is best to avoid
grazing from the end of June to September, it is not ideally suited for
use in stock havens. Lucerne is also well suited for making hay and
silage and could be mechanically harvested in young pine stands that
are vulnerable to animal damage.
Cocksfoot, on the other hand, has a place for stock havens as there
would be feed available from it in winter. If the stock haven was to be
used during lambing or after pre-lamb shearing, its productivity and
nutritive value could be increased by judicious use of
fertilisers.

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| Grazing in the agroforestry
cocksfoot/clover treatment at age 7 years. |
Understorey pastures reduce tree growth
In the Lincoln experiment we were able to compare the competitive
effects of various pastures on radiata pine growth as we had a control
treatment that had no understorey. The competitive effects on tree
growth were most marked in the early years until the tree roots were
able to fully exploit the soil. Later in the study the competition
decreased, as the trees were dominating the site and pasture
productivity was dropping. Between age 11 and 16 years the mean annual
increments in height, diameter and volume were the same for all
treatments.
This competition loss translates to about two years of growth or up
to 8 per cent volume reduction at the end of the rotation. Another way
to look at this is to say that it would be necessary to
increase the rotation by two years to get the same wood volume to
harvest. However, there were also changes in tree quality that may
partly offset this productivity loss.
Nitrogen competition
The competition between pastures was largely for moisture but also for
nitrogen. The nitrogen competition was surprisingly severe with lucerne
when it was being forage harvested, despite this species being a
nitrogen fixing legume. In the third growing season, lucerne fixed 230
kg nitrogen per hectare but forage harvesting removed 342 kg nitrogen
per hectare leading to a deficit of 122 kg nitrogen per hectare. The
nitrogen levels in the tree foliage at two years dropped from 1.77 per
cent in the bare-ground plots down to 1.42 per cent in the
lucerne treatment and the trees were distinctly yellow in colour. The
pastures containing clover followed similar trends but the effects were
not as severe. However once grazing was begun in the fourth growing
season the nitrogen stress disappeared, particularly in the lucerne
treatment, although the cocksfoot/clover and ryegrass alone treatments
had marginal nitrogen levels in the pine foliage at six years.
If strong competing pastures such as lucerne are being used in
agroforestry it is important to ensure that the immediate area close to
young trees is kept free of them. We used a metre wide strip. This was
sufficient to ensure good tree survivals, despite studies showing that
both lucerne and phalaris roots invaded the sprayed strip more than
cocksfoot. Lucerne was also shown to use the soil moisture more quickly
in the spring than ryegrass/clover and to extract soil moisture to a
greater depth. These moisture effects became less marked after four
years as the tree roots more fully exploited the soil.
(top)
Improving tree form
On fertile soils, for example when planting on arable soils or areas
with improved pastures, tree form may be compromised compared to
typical plantation sites. This experiment showed that it is possible to
control tree form by choosing a suitable competitive understorey
pasture.
Trees grown with pastures were more cylindrical and had less taper
than trees where there was no understorey competition. At eight
years the difference in average taper was about 20 per cent
reducing to under 10 per cent by 16 years. These differences translated
into a 15 per cent to 21 per cent reduction in maximum diameter over
stubs. Furthermore, trees grown with competition had less butt sweep,
wobbles, kinks, a smaller branch index in the second log, and fewer
multiple leaders. In general, trees grown with lucerne had the best
form. In part, the improved form of the butt log was related to the
lower degree of toppling that occurred soon after establishment.
Experimental
overview
Five contrasting pastures were compared with a tree only treatment and
with the same pastures grown in the open.
Main treatments –
- Bare ground control – no understorey competition.
- Maru phalaris and clovers sown in 1990 and converted to
Kaituna lucerne in 1999.
- WL320 lucerne sown in 1990.
- Wana cocksfoot and clovers, sown in 1990.
- Yatsyn, high-endophyte perennial rye-grass and clovers,
sown in 1990 and abandoned in 2000.
- Yatsyn perennial rye-grass without clovers, sown in 1992
and abandoned in 2000.
The clovers used were a mixture of Pawera red clover, Huia white clover
and Woogenullup subterranean clover. Pastures were cut for silage
during the first three growing seasons, partly to reduce damage to
trees, and subsequently rotationally grazed.
Within each plot were four tissue-cultured clones (GF 15 to 17) and a
seedling line (GF 14) of radiata pine. Trees were planted at 1000 stems
per hectare and thinned down to 200 stems per hectare by age seven
years. Pruning to six metres was done in four lifts.
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Clones versus seedlings
The results at 11 years suggested that tree growth was markedly
affected by the choice of tree type used. One tissue-cultured clone
stood out as being faster growing, although this was closely followed
by a second clone and the seedlings. However, by 16 years there was no
difference between the seedlings and three of the clones.
The different tree types also influenced the degree of malformation
and
log quality. The seedlings, in particular, were more malformed than the
physiologically aged tissue cultured clones, with two clones in
particular standing out as better than the rest. Tree type also
influenced toppling with one clone showing almost no toppling at two
years, while 65 per cent of the seedlings had toppled to greater than
15o. Differences in tree stability were related to rooting habits
including higher root to shoot ratios. Obviously, if it is possible to
choose tree stocks that will be stable in the early years this would be
a distinct advantage.
Soil changes
The establishment of radiata pine with pasture understoreys on former
arable land led to changes in the soils. In particular, soil organic
matter and soil organic phosphate increased. This is in contrast to
where trees were planted on already high producing pastures such as at
Tikiteri, where soil organic matter decreased. The trees with
understorey pastures often showed significantly higher phosphate levels
in their foliage than the trees without an understorey and vector
analysis showed this was due to improved uptake of phosphate.
Agroforestry also led to a reduction in exchangeable potassium, and
sometimes reduced potassium in the foliage of the trees, but not to
levels which would influence tree growth.
Summary
The results from the Lincoln agroforestry experiment show
- Lucerne and cocksfoot are both excellent pastures to use in
agroforestry.
- Lucerne
can be introduced at any stage provided there is enough light. It is
the most productive pasture in terms of pasture and animal production
of the pastures we tested. However, it is not so suitable if animal
feed is required under the trees in winterand it requires rotational
grazing.
- Cocksfoot/clover was more shade tolerant and would be better for
stock havens during winter or for spring lambing.
- When
clover decline in cocksfoot pastures, productivity and quality in late
winter and spring can be increased by applying fertiliser in the
autumn.
- Forage harvesting pastures, even where there
is a high level of nitrogen fixation occurring in the pasture, can lead
to nitrogen stress in young trees.
- The tree growth
reduction from highly competitive pastures such as lucerne is greatest
in the early years and disappears as the understorey is shaded out. The
loss of tree growth can be compensated by increasing the rotation by
two years.
- Selecting a competitive understorey such as
lucerne or cocksfoot leads to improved wood quality. The trees are
straighter and have smaller branches.
- Selecting aged clones can result in less toppling and better tree
form.
- Soil changes were relatively minor but those that did occur on
this arable soil indicated improved organic matter status.
Don Mead lives at Milnthorpe in Golden Bay and Dick Lucas can be
contacted at PO Box 84, Lincoln University.
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