Tese
Produção e comportamento animal em pastagem natural manejada sob pastoreio rotativo – análise conjunta de experimentos
Fecha
2018-03-09Autor
Soares, Émerson Mendes
Institución
Resumen
The aim of this work was to study, through a joint analysis of experiments, the effects of
rotational grazing, using rest intervals based on duration of leaf expansion of native grasses, on
the primary and secondary production as well as grazing behaviour of beef heifers. Then, it was
elaborated a database from experiments conducted using beef heifers managed in a natural
grassland under rotational grazing, using two rest intervals between grazing: 375 and 750
degree-day (DD). The experimental design of the area was randomized blocks where the two
rest intervals were the treatments with three area replicates for each treatment. The database
was composed by eight experiments performed between 2010 and 2014, it was considered as
fixed effects the treatments and climatic seasons; studies and experimental error as random
effects. The mean area production was 411 kg body weight/hectare/year, considering a mean
stocking rate of 915 kg body weight per hectare and an average daily gain of 0,276 kg body
weight per day. The use of rotational grazing, using grazing rest intervals based on duration of
leaf expansion of native grasses, was able to increase the utilization efficiency of natural
grasslands areas, making possible adequate individual gain for rearing beef heifers between
weaning and breeding at 24 months old. Beef heifers have a diurnal grazing pattern when
managed in natural grassland under rotational grazing. However, there are significant grazing
activities during dark periods as well as climatic season differences in the moment when
animals perform those activities. Grazing behaviour assessments in beef heifers managed in
natural grasslands, performed only on diurnal period, do not contemplate the required period to
represent all grazing activities. To contemplate all grazing activities, it is necessary to perform
the grazing behaviour assessments between dawn and midnight.