Growth and biomass allocation of the C4 grasses Brachiaria brizantha and B. humidicola under shade

Authors

  • Moacyr Bernardino Dias Filho

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1590/S1678-3921.pab2000.v35.6029

Keywords:

specific leaf area, growth rate, pastures, light regimes

Abstract

The growth and biomass allocation responses of the tropical forage grasses Brachiaria brizantha cv. Marandu and B. humidicola were compared for plants grown outdoors, in pots, in full sunlight and those shaded to 30% of full sunlight over a 30-day period. The objective was to evaluate the acclimation capacity of these species to low light. Both species were able to quickly develop phenotypic adjustments in response to low light. Specific leaf area and leaf area ratio were higher for low-light plants during the entire experimental period. Low-light plants allocated significantly less biomass to root and more to leaf tissue than high-light plants. However, the biomass allocation pattern to culms was different for the two species under low light: it increased in B. brizantha, but decreased in B. humidicola, probably as a reflection of the growth habits of these species. Relative growth rate and tillering were higher in high-light plants. Leaf elongation rate was significantly increased on both species under low light; however, the difference between treatments was higher in B. brizantha. These results are discussed in relation to the pasture management implications.

Published

2000-12-01

How to Cite

Filho, M. B. D. (2000). Growth and biomass allocation of the C4 grasses <i>Brachiaria brizantha</i> and B. <i>humidicola</i> under shade. Pesquisa Agropecuaria Brasileira, 35(12), 2335–2341. https://doi.org/10.1590/S1678-3921.pab2000.v35.6029

Issue

Section

PLANT PHYSIOLOGY