The use of annual-based pasture and/or annual crops is now common practice in the higher rainfall regions of southern Australia where livestock grazing is the traditional practice. The lower water use of these annual-based systems, compared with systems based on perennial pastures, exacerbates issues of waterlogging, rising watertables and salinity in these regions. For environmental reasons farming systems used in the higher rainfall regions should target the use of more perennials in the landscape, but this should not be done at the expense of farm productivity or profitability. Intercropping, where the pasture component of the system is a perennial species, may provide the opportunity to maintain or improve farm productivity whilst deliv...
Lucerne phase farming has been suggested as a way of reducing deep drainage in the cereal belt of so...
Evaluating the potential scale of adoption of a technological innovation or management practice at t...
Species composition is limiting production in >65% of pastures in Tasmania, Australia—a situation no...
Annual-based pasture and/ annual crops are now commonly the basis of farming practices in higher rai...
In 2009, 95 farmers in the mixed farming zone of southern New South Wales (NSW), average annual rain...
Pasture cropping is an emerging farming-systems practice of southern Australia, in which winter grai...
Traditional farming systems in south west Australia based on annual plants have been shown to use in...
Dryland salinity, soil acidification and weed herbicide resistance challenge traditional agricultura...
A substantial proportion of Australian animal production from grazing comes from regions and farms w...
In southern Australia, 50% of grain-producing farms also run beef and/or sheep enterprises. Legume p...
Developing new and improved grazing systems for crop–livestock farms where crop production is the ma...
Dual purpose Merino enterprises on the south coast of Western Australia (WA) typically utilise agric...
Rainfed grain production, based on winter cereals, is marginal in south-west Queensland, Australia, ...
Integrating perennial plants like lucerne into farming systems has been widely recommended to mimic ...
Pasture-cropping is a novel approach to increase the area of perennial crops in mixed sheep and crop...
Lucerne phase farming has been suggested as a way of reducing deep drainage in the cereal belt of so...
Evaluating the potential scale of adoption of a technological innovation or management practice at t...
Species composition is limiting production in >65% of pastures in Tasmania, Australia—a situation no...
Annual-based pasture and/ annual crops are now commonly the basis of farming practices in higher rai...
In 2009, 95 farmers in the mixed farming zone of southern New South Wales (NSW), average annual rain...
Pasture cropping is an emerging farming-systems practice of southern Australia, in which winter grai...
Traditional farming systems in south west Australia based on annual plants have been shown to use in...
Dryland salinity, soil acidification and weed herbicide resistance challenge traditional agricultura...
A substantial proportion of Australian animal production from grazing comes from regions and farms w...
In southern Australia, 50% of grain-producing farms also run beef and/or sheep enterprises. Legume p...
Developing new and improved grazing systems for crop–livestock farms where crop production is the ma...
Dual purpose Merino enterprises on the south coast of Western Australia (WA) typically utilise agric...
Rainfed grain production, based on winter cereals, is marginal in south-west Queensland, Australia, ...
Integrating perennial plants like lucerne into farming systems has been widely recommended to mimic ...
Pasture-cropping is a novel approach to increase the area of perennial crops in mixed sheep and crop...
Lucerne phase farming has been suggested as a way of reducing deep drainage in the cereal belt of so...
Evaluating the potential scale of adoption of a technological innovation or management practice at t...
Species composition is limiting production in >65% of pastures in Tasmania, Australia—a situation no...