{"title":"Yield and growth rates of pastures grown in the Bay of Plenty region over 35 years","authors":"Derrick Moot, Carmen Teixeira, Martin Hawke","doi":"10.33584/jnzg.2023.85.3600","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Bay of Plenty district, and particularly the Rotorua Lakes area, has a diverse terrain and soil types which influence pasture production. Regular measurement of pasture production enables short term decision making on a farm scale and is invaluable for catchment,district and regional long term management strategies. Thomas (Tom) M. Gee, was a retired farmer with more than 18 years of field trial experience with MAF Field Research Division. He collected data from more than 30 farms after he retired. Data from other sites in the district were collected in the early 1970s by MAF technicians stationed in Whakatane and Tauranga and later by AgResearch staff and a farm consultant based in Rotorua. Tom Gee’s mission was to use these measurements to provide farmers with rates of growth (ROG) data to inform them about their farm. The Gee farm (Fairbank) of 200 ha was originally leased from Ngati Whakaue Tribal Lands in 1916 and then purchased before much of it was sold back to the Incorporation in 1970. Tom retired in 1989 but kept meticulously recording pasture growth rates on different farms up to ~ 2007. Some field notes were lost, but datasets with gaps are still useful to assist monthly growth rates calculations. His valuable and extensive (almost 25 years) on farm field records have been retrieved, compiled, assembled, and digitised, to be saved electronically, and entered into the AgYields National Database hosted at Lincoln University. Part of this legacy dataset has been summarised and dry matter yields and growth rates calculated, consistent withprevious methods, to provide a quantified description of mean monthly pasture growth rates across the Bay of Plenty region, in New Zealand.","PeriodicalId":36573,"journal":{"name":"Journal of New Zealand Grasslands","volume":" 605","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2023-11-10","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of New Zealand Grasslands","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.33584/jnzg.2023.85.3600","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q3","JCRName":"Environmental Science","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Bay of Plenty district, and particularly the Rotorua Lakes area, has a diverse terrain and soil types which influence pasture production. Regular measurement of pasture production enables short term decision making on a farm scale and is invaluable for catchment,district and regional long term management strategies. Thomas (Tom) M. Gee, was a retired farmer with more than 18 years of field trial experience with MAF Field Research Division. He collected data from more than 30 farms after he retired. Data from other sites in the district were collected in the early 1970s by MAF technicians stationed in Whakatane and Tauranga and later by AgResearch staff and a farm consultant based in Rotorua. Tom Gee’s mission was to use these measurements to provide farmers with rates of growth (ROG) data to inform them about their farm. The Gee farm (Fairbank) of 200 ha was originally leased from Ngati Whakaue Tribal Lands in 1916 and then purchased before much of it was sold back to the Incorporation in 1970. Tom retired in 1989 but kept meticulously recording pasture growth rates on different farms up to ~ 2007. Some field notes were lost, but datasets with gaps are still useful to assist monthly growth rates calculations. His valuable and extensive (almost 25 years) on farm field records have been retrieved, compiled, assembled, and digitised, to be saved electronically, and entered into the AgYields National Database hosted at Lincoln University. Part of this legacy dataset has been summarised and dry matter yields and growth rates calculated, consistent withprevious methods, to provide a quantified description of mean monthly pasture growth rates across the Bay of Plenty region, in New Zealand.
丰盛湾地区,特别是罗托鲁瓦湖区,有多种地形和土壤类型,影响牧场生产。定期测量牧场产量有助于农场规模的短期决策,对流域、地区和区域的长期管理战略具有不可估量的价值。Thomas (Tom) M. Gee是一名退休农民,在MAF田间研究部有超过18年的田间试验经验。退休后,他从30多个农场收集数据。1970年代初,驻扎在Whakatane和Tauranga的MAF技术人员以及后来在Rotorua的AgResearch工作人员和一名农业顾问收集了该地区其他地点的数据。汤姆·吉的任务是利用这些测量为农民提供生长速率(ROG)数据,让他们了解自己的农场。200公顷的吉农场(费尔班克)最初是在1916年从Ngati Whakaue部落土地租赁的,然后在1970年将大部分土地卖回公司之前购买。汤姆于1989年退休,但一直细致地记录不同农场的牧草增长率,直到2007年。一些实地记录丢失了,但有缺口的数据集仍然有助于计算每月的增长率。他宝贵而广泛的(近25年)农场现场记录已被检索、编译、汇编和数字化,以电子方式保存,并进入林肯大学主办的农业产量国家数据库。与以前的方法一致,对该遗留数据集的一部分进行了总结,并计算了干物质产量和生长率,以提供新西兰丰盛湾地区平均月牧草生长率的量化描述。