Fall Grazing Management and Plant Health

Rory Lewandowski, OSU Extension Educator, Athens County

The experienced grazier knows that how grass pastures are managed in the fall of the year determines what they have to manage in the spring of the year. While we tend to think of fall as bringing an end to pasture growth, it turns out that this is a critical time for the grass plant.

In fact, for our perennial grass plants, fall is not so much an end as it is a beginning, or at least laying a foundation for a beginning. Although seed production is one way that a perennial plant can survive from year to year, in pastures the more important way that plants survive is re-growth from buds located at the crown of the plant. It is during the short day, long night periods in the fall of the year that flower buds are formed/initiated on the crown of the plant. While the leaf tissue dies during the winter, the buds and roots of the plant remain as living tissues over the winter and continue to respire and burn energy. If root reserves are insufficient, the plant may die over the winter .If the plant survives but root reserves are low, spring re-growth and vigor of the plant is reduced.

From a plant health standpoint, overgrazing during the fall is more detrimental to the plant compared to overgrazing followed by rest in the early part of the growing season. Here is the reason why. Early in the growing season environmental conditions are generally favorable for rapid growth. Rapid growth means regenerating leaf area. This allows the plant to quickly get to the point where photosynthesis replaces any storage carbohydrates that were used to start growth following defoliation and to then put excess carbohydrates towards further growth. In the fall of the year environmental conditions are not as favorable for rapid growth. We can’t count upon an overgrazed plant being able to generate a lot of leaf growth. Physiologically, the plant growth response, the ability to put out new leaf material, is more sensitive to low temperature than photosynthesis. In other words, even when plant growth might be very slow, if there is leaf area present, photosynthesis is taking place. On a practical level this means that since the plant growth rate is slowed the carbohydrates produced by photosynthesis during this time period accumulate in plant storage organs. This is exactly what the plant needs to survive the winter and produce new growth next spring.

We sometimes use the term “carbohydrate root reserves” to make a distinction between carbohydrates used for growth and those used for storage. Technically, our cool season grasses store the majority of carbohydrate reserves in stem and tiller bases, some in rhizomes, and only a little in roots. Regardless of the technicality, root vigor and volume is linked to leaf growth and vice versa. However, this technicality does help us to understand some management aspects of pasture grass and fall carbohydrate storage. For example, orchardgrass stores carbohydrates in the lower 3-4 inches of stem bases and tillers. Tall fescue and bluegrass both maintain carbohydrate storage at the base of tillers as well as rhizomes.Tall fescue and bluegrass can both tolerate lower grazing/clipping heights than orchardgrass.

Once we reach the fall period, it is critical that grass plants be managed to insure that adequate leaf area is left after a grazing pass. Photosynthesis will provide the carbohydrates needed for winter storage, provided there is adequate leaf area. Since leaf growth will be slow, this means leaving a typical grazing residual plus some extra. For orchardgrass, this probably means 4-5 inches at a minimum. Tall fescue and bluegrass should probably be managed to leave a 3-4 inch residual. What is the consequence of not maintaining enough leaf area in the fall and overgrazing the plant? Last year’s drought provided us with the perfect example. In Athens County, I saw pastures that were overgrazed in the fall that were very slow to green up and start growth in the spring. I saw overgrazed pastures exhibit lower growth rates. Some pastures never got back to pre-drought productivity.

I sometimes get asked at what point in the fall can grasses be grazed to soil level without harming the plant? This has to be once top growth has ceased and when soil temperature falls below 40 degrees F. Depending upon the year, that is likely in late November or even into early December in our area. Of course, overgrazing in the fall of the year might be used as a strategy to weaken a dominant grass stand and set it up for a frost seeding of clover. This could allow the clover seedling to compete more favorably with the grass and result in better establishment.

Fall is not the time to relax grazing management. It is a critical time for the plant to build carbohydrate reserves. Good grazing management in the fall is the first step to more grass growth and better grazing conditions next spring.

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