Part 2.-Utilising Native grasses Not all station managers are fortunate enough to have permanent water suitable for the irrigation schemes discussed in the last issue of the Journal. Where irrigation is difficult or impossible, pastoralists should be interested in the possibilities of conserving native grasses grown under natural rainfall condition
The effects of recycled water (effluent) on 8 tropical grasses growing in 100-L bags of sand were st...
Soil conservation work by the North Eastern Goldfields Soil Conservation District is making valuable...
Sub-tropical grasses are showing excellent potential in the Northern Agricultural Region (NAR) of We...
Part 2.-Utilising Native grasses Not all station managers are fortunate enough to have permanent wat...
Throughout a large portion of the Kimberleys it is becoming increasingly evident that some form of f...
Many adverse situations in Western Australian agriculture have arisen because in the past we cleared...
ONE of the ever-present problems of the pastoral areas is that of providing: watering-points in reas...
Since the time of European settlement in Western Australia, the replacement of native vegetation wit...
The grass family (Poaceae) is one of the largest and most cosmopolitan of the flowering plant famili...
On a great number of our North-West and Kimberley stations, surplus water, which could be used for i...
The development of agriculture in south-western Australia has been characterised by the replacement ...
The dairy industry in the southern Murray Darling Basin region of Australia is a major consumer of i...
The growing number of extreme weather events has created the need to identify tropical forage grasse...
SMALL scale conservation of water for agricultural use is becoming increasingly important throughout...
fOREWORD The so-called "desert " country of Central Queensland has filled a useful role th...
The effects of recycled water (effluent) on 8 tropical grasses growing in 100-L bags of sand were st...
Soil conservation work by the North Eastern Goldfields Soil Conservation District is making valuable...
Sub-tropical grasses are showing excellent potential in the Northern Agricultural Region (NAR) of We...
Part 2.-Utilising Native grasses Not all station managers are fortunate enough to have permanent wat...
Throughout a large portion of the Kimberleys it is becoming increasingly evident that some form of f...
Many adverse situations in Western Australian agriculture have arisen because in the past we cleared...
ONE of the ever-present problems of the pastoral areas is that of providing: watering-points in reas...
Since the time of European settlement in Western Australia, the replacement of native vegetation wit...
The grass family (Poaceae) is one of the largest and most cosmopolitan of the flowering plant famili...
On a great number of our North-West and Kimberley stations, surplus water, which could be used for i...
The development of agriculture in south-western Australia has been characterised by the replacement ...
The dairy industry in the southern Murray Darling Basin region of Australia is a major consumer of i...
The growing number of extreme weather events has created the need to identify tropical forage grasse...
SMALL scale conservation of water for agricultural use is becoming increasingly important throughout...
fOREWORD The so-called "desert " country of Central Queensland has filled a useful role th...
The effects of recycled water (effluent) on 8 tropical grasses growing in 100-L bags of sand were st...
Soil conservation work by the North Eastern Goldfields Soil Conservation District is making valuable...
Sub-tropical grasses are showing excellent potential in the Northern Agricultural Region (NAR) of We...