Seasonal dynamics of ground cover in Cirsium arvense – a basis for estimating grazing losses and economic impacts

2016 
Summary Analysis of the economics of managing Cirsium arvense in grazed pastures worldwide has been hampered by a lack of data on the within-year seasonal dynamics of the weed and its impact on the yield of palatable herbage. To redress this, the seasonal pattern in within-patch percentage ground cover of the weed was determined from measurements on 39 dairy and 66 sheep and/or beef cattle farms in New Zealand during 2009–2010 and 2010–2011. This pattern was then scaled using farmer estimates of peak whole-farm cover to derive mean monthly covers for dairy, beef, sheep/beef, sheep and deer farms. These monthly covers corresponded, respectively, to mean annual percentage covers of 2.7, 1.7, 3.0, 5.9 and 2.9% and to mean annual percentage losses in pasture growth (palatable herbage yield) of 3.6, 2.3, 4.0, 7.8 and 3.9%. The latter, in combination with 2011–2012 farm statistics, revealed that C. arvense caused a national loss in pastoral farm gross revenue in New Zealand in 2011–2012 of $685 million ($446 m dairy, $233 m sheep/beef, $6 m deer). Beyond the scope of this paper, the monthly covers and their corresponding monthly losses in pasture growth provide a basis for modelling the economic impacts of C. arvense and its management at a farm scale. More generally, the analytical method that we have developed is appropriate for evaluating the economic impact of any weed in a grazed pasture, particularly those exhibiting pronounced seasonal patterns in occupancy, such as annuals and deciduous perennials.
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