4.0 Article

Summer drought survival and recovery in Microlaena stipoides

Journal

RANGELAND JOURNAL
Volume 38, Issue 5, Pages 501-510

Publisher

CSIRO PUBLISHING
DOI: 10.1071/RJ16005

Keywords

native grass; rainout shelters; relative water content; weeping grass

Categories

Funding

  1. Charles Sturt University Postgraduate Research Scholarship
  2. Future Farming Industries CRC
  3. AW Howard Memorial Trust Fellowship
  4. Department of Economic Development, Jobs, Transport and Resources

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Microlaena stipoides (microlaena) is an important perennial grass in over 7million hectares of native pastures in southern Australia and can survive and persist despite severe soil water deficits during summer. Many other pasture species survive similar conditions by relying on summer dormancy, which raises the possibility that microlaena may behave similarly. A field experiment using rainout shelters was conducted on an existing microlaena pasture in north-east Victoria. The experiment was a split-plot design with two watering treatments ('summer storm' or 'summer dry') as main plots and three defoliation treatments (nil, intense defoliation, strategic defoliation) as subplots. The 'summer storm' treatment resulted in the formation of new buds and tillers and increased basal cover from 1% in February to 18% in March. A glasshouse pot experiment examined the recovery of microlaena after different periods of drought and subsequent rewatering. In the pot experiment, microlaena withstood relatively short (up to 30 days) dry periods and then recovered when rewatered. Thus, it appears that microlaena is a persistent, perennial pasture plant that, although it survives very dry summers in Mediterranean areas, is not summer dormant. Microlaena does not exhibit summer dormancy in response to moisture stress and enter a quiescent stage, because normal growth is prevented by the lack of water, but it quickly recommences growth when soil water becomes available. The ability of microlaena to withstand summer soil water deficits and to recruit from seedlings make it a valuable pasture species across drought-prone environments, and this undoubtedly partly explains its very broad adaptation across eastern Australia.

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