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The place of crested wheatgrass on wheat farms
1947
Thomas, Herman La Motte | Mumford, D. Curtis (Dwight Curtis)
The effect of spacing on the yield-protein relationship of wheat and barley
1947
Guitard, A. A.
Abstract of principal provisions of Memorandum on proposed international wheat agreement, January 28, 1947
1947
The growing of oats on wheat farms enables greater diversification and conserves fertility
1947
Revised estimates of stocks on farms | Stocks on farms; corn, wheat, oats, barley, rye, soybeans and hay
1947
Official report to the Secretary of State on the International Wheat Conference in London ... 1947
1947
Controlling field bindweed by grazing with sheep
1947
Stahler, L.M. | Carlson, A.E.
1. Experiments were conducted at Lamberton, Minn., from 1939 to 1944 to determine the effectiveness of grazing sheep in controlling bindweed on infested land sown to several crops. 2. A combination of fall-sown wheat and rye grazed in May and June, followed by Sudan grass grazed in July and August, consistently eliminated bindweed in two seasons. 3. The grazing of perennial pasture mixtures consisting of alfalfa and bromegrass or alfalfa and reed canarygrass did not eliminate bindweed in any of three experiments. 4. The bindweed was not eradicated in ungrazed plots of rye and wheat harvested for grain, and plots of alfalfa-bromegrass and alfalfa-reed canarygrass mixtures cut for hay. 5. The grazing of pure bindweed reduced the stand somewhat, but this practice was much less effective than was the grazing of infested land on which crops were being grown. 6. Sheep grazed the bindweed in preference to wheat, rye, or Sudan grass. Rye was more palatable than was wheat. They grazed alfalfa, bromegrass, or bindweed without discrimination but preferred these to reed canarygrass. Bindweed growing with wheat, Sudan grass, or rye is grazed in preference to that grown alone in full sunlight. 7. Yields of clipped forage of the crops and crop mixtures used in this investigation were higher than yields from adjacent well-established bluegrass pasture. The crude protein content was high in all of the clipped herbage.
Show more [+] Less [-]Studies on physiologic specialization in Puccinia graminis tritici Erikss. & Henn. in China and varietal resistance of wheat
1947
Yin, Sin-yün
Comparative effects of season, location, and variety on the yield and quality of North Dakota hard red spring wheat
1947
Harris, R. H. (Rae Hudson)
The effects of grazing winter small grains
1947
Washko, J.B.
Two varieties representing erect and prostrate types of each of the winter small grains, oats, barley, wheat, and rye, were grazed with sheep at Knoxville, Tenn. during the years 1943-44, 1944-45, and 1945-46 to determine the effects of this forage removal on subsequent grain yields, plant height, tillering, and maturity. The rye, barley, and oats produced approximately equal amounts of forage in the fall, whereas the wheat produced the least fall forage. In the spring the rye furnished the largest amount of forage, the barley and wheat next largest, and the oats the smallest amount. In total forage production, rye out-yielded the other small grains with only minor differences in total forage yields occurring between barley, wheat, and oats. Differences in forage production between erect and prostrate varieties of the same small grains were minor and did not appear to be related to growth habit. Grazing with sheep as practiced in these experiments was detrimental to grain production of all the four small grains. On a percentage basis this reduction in grain yield ranged from a low of 23.2% to a high of 46.7%, depending upon the variety and kind of small grain. Except for rye, growth habit was directly related to grain yield reductions caused by grazing. The prostrate growing types suffered less reduction than the erect types. Grazing also reduced plant height and tillering and postponed ripening from 4 to 8 days. As regards these characteristics, growth habit was associated only with plant height reduction; as in the case of grain yield, the height of prostrate varieties was reduced less by grazing than that of erect varieties. As indicated by chemical analyses of the forage obtained only in 1945-46, small grain forage is high in protein, calcium, and phosphorus. Fall forage proved to be superior to spring forage in the components mentioned. Observations on palatability indicated that oats were preferred by sheep to the other small grains. The palatability relationships of the other small grains and of the varieties themselves were not clear, since the sheep were inconsistent in their preferences. There did not appear to be any direct association between palatability of the various varieties and their growth habits.
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