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College of Agriculture and Life Sciences Department of Agronomy
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Agronomy Advice FC 14.12.2 Dec 1999
RYEGRASS TYPES FOR PASTURE AND HAY
Dennis Cosgrove, Michael Casler and Dan Undersander
Along with a renewed interest in grazing in the upper
Midwest has come an increased awareness of
ryegrass as a potential forage. Several
ryegrass types exist and species within the ryegrass genus (Lolium)
readily cross with one another, resulting in a wide variety of plant types.
This may cause some confusion when trying to determine the best choice for
planting. Below is a brief review of
the types of ryegrass which have potential in the Midwest.
Italian (Annual) Ryegrass
The U.S. has nearly 1.2 million acres of annual
ryegrass (Lolium multiflorum Lam.);
90% of which is in the southeastern U.S. Also called Italian ryegrass, it is native
to southern Europe. However, annual
ryegrass is not a true annual and may behave as a biennial or even a
short-lived perennial depending on environmental conditions. In areas of the northern US and southern
Canada with reliable snow cover, it can survive for 5 or more years in mixture
with perennial legumes. Its primary use
in the southeast is as a winter pasture where it is planted in fall, it is
grazed during winter, and then dies the following summer.
Annual ryegrass has very little cold tolerance and
therefore would behave like an annual in the Midwest except in mild winters or
with excellent snow cover. It has
potential, as an annual forage crop, to
provide high quality grazing for dairy cattle.
It will produce high yields and maintains productivity through the
mid-summer slump better than most other cool season grasses.
It is easy to establish and grows rapidly. Plants will produce heads in the seeding
year. This characteristic reduces quality unless plants are grazed prior to
seed head emergence. Planting later
maturing varieties will make it easier to graze plants before heading occurs.
Annual ryegrass is the grass of choice for frost
seeding to improve pasture quality because it establishes rapidly, yields
better than other ryegrass types through summer, and has the highest yields in
the seeding year. It is also
recommended for use as a cover crop when establishing new seedings of
pasture. Adding it to a seed mixture
with a legume and a more permanent cool season grass, like bromegrass, timothy
or orchardgrass, will provide rapid growth and high quality forage in the
seeding year. The ryegrass will die in
1 to 3 years leaving behind the other grasses and legumes.
Both forage and turf types of annual ryegrass are
available. Turf types are low growing
and have poor yield. Turf types are
also infected with a fungal endophyte that lives inside the plant, protecting
it from insect attack, but producing a toxin reducing performance of grazing animals. Plant only forage type cultivars for grazing
or mechanically harvested forage.
Perennial Ryegrass
Perennial ryegrass (Lolium perenne L.) is
native to Europe, Asia and North Africa. The U.S. has about 250,000 acres, most
of which are in the northeast and on the pacific coast in Oregon and
Washington. It is best adapted to mild-temperate climates. It is one of the
highest quality forage grasses. The
primary use of perennial ryegrass is for pasturing cattle and sheep cows.
Perennial ryegrass is more persistent than annual
ryegrass but less persistent in the Midwest than other cool season grass
species. It tillers more profusely but
is lower growing than annual ryegrass and will not form a seed head in the
seeding year. It is more susceptible to
a summer slump than annual ryegrass.
Perennial ryegrass will head early under dry conditions after the
seeding year.
There are both diploid (two sets of chromosomes) and
tetraploid (four sets of chromosomes) cultivars of perennial ryegrass. Tetraploids have larger tillers and seed
heads and wider leaves. Tetraploid types tend to be taller and less dense than
diploid types, even in early stages of regrowth. They are usually more disease
resistant and may be higher yielding than diploid types. Few diploid varieties perform well in
Wisconsin as they go dormant during mid-summer. Currently available tetraploid varieties are Bastion, Citadel,
Condesa and Fantoom.
Perennial ryegrass should be grazed closely and
frequently. It recovers rapidly and
tillers extensively. Plants will not
stockpile well and must have good snow cover to survive the winter.
Ryegrass is susceptible to crown rust. This disease can seriously defoliate the
plant. Plant only rust resistant
varieties if possible.
Perennial ryegrass should be used mainly for grazing
or hay/haylage in mixture with red clover in northern Michigan, Minnesota, and
Wisconsin where snow cover makes 3-year stands likely. Perennial ryegrass, like other ryegrass
types, can also be frost seeded in early spring to help maintain it as a
component of a permanent pasture. Both
forage and turf types of annual ryegrass are available, as with annual
ryegrass, but plant only forage type should be planted cultivars for grazing or
cut forage.
Intermediate (Short Rotation) Ryegrass
Intermediate, or short rotation ryegrass (Lolium
hybridum, Hausska.), is the result of a cross between annual and perennial
ryegrass. As such, it is intermediate in many of the above mentioned
traits. It is less winter hardy but
higher yielding than perennial ryegrass.
Its uses would be similar to perennial ryegrass. Bison is the only currently available
variety. Its recommended use would be
for grazing or hay/haylage production in northern Michigan, Minnesota, and
Wisconsin.
Festuloliums
Festuloliums (Festulolium braunii, K.A.) are
derived from a cross between either Italian or perennial ryegrass and meadow
fescue. The name is a combination of Lolium,
the genus of ryegrass, and Festuca, the genus of fescue.
Meadow fescue is a close relative of the more commonly
grown tall fescue grown in the mid-south region of the U.S. and used for
pasturing beef cattle. Meadow fescue is
persistent, easily established and managed and exhibits rapid regrowth and good
disease resistance. It has not been
widely used however due to poor palatability resulting in animal consumption
inadequate to support high milk production in lactating dairy cows.
As festuloliums have better persistence, disease
resistance and winter hardiness than ryegrasses and better season-long
productivity and higher forage quality than fescues (more like ryegrass). Some
varieties are more like the ryegrasses and some more like the fescues,
depending on the breeding effort following the cross. Tandem II is the only currently available cultivar.
Undersander©2001