Hyparrhenia hirta (L.) Stapf

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Graminae

Synonyms

Andropogon hirtus L.

Common names

Tambookie grass (Australia), coolatai grass (New South Wales), South African bluestem (United States), common thatching grass (southern Africa).

Description

Tufted perennial up to 90 cm high. Panicle loose, rather scanty; spatheoles 5 cm long with terminally exserted white or grey villous racemes, upper raceme base glabrous, fine, 4 mm long; pedicelled hairy spikelets 5-6 cm long. There are ten to 14 awns per raceme pair compared with two to six for H. filipendula (Napper, 1965).

Distribution

Mediterranean region, Near East, Iran, Iraq to north-west India, tropical eastern and southern Africa.

Season of growth

Summer-growing, with good autumn growth and some winter greenness.

Altitude range

1 200-2 500 m.

Rainfall requirements

It grows satisfactorily with a rainfall of 500 mm or more, with a general range of 750-1 000 mm in Africa (Robinson & Potts, 1950).

Drought tolerance

Extremely drought tolerant and persistent.

Soil requirements

It has wide soil tolerance, including dry, hard, rocky soils and deep dry sands (Barnard, 1969).

Ability to spread naturally

It does not spread well by seed (Robinson & Potts, 1950).

Number of seeds per kg.

1 320 000.

Vigour of growth and growth rhythm

A vigorous grass, making good summer growth.

Response to defoliation

It stands heavy grazing and in fact requires it to prevent its running to seed and becoming inedible.

Grazing management

Graze heavily to prevent seeding and top-dress with 50 kg N/ha in midsummer.

Response to fire

It is usually burnt to destroy old growth and makes a good recovery after a burn.

Dry-matter and green-matter yields

Under irrigation in south-west Australia it produced from 24 000-30 000 kg DM/ha with six fertilizer dressings totalling 168, 66 and 180 kg/ha of nitrogen, phosphorus and potassium respectively, plus lime and the trace elements calcium and zinc (Roberts & Carbon, 1969).

Suitability for hay and silage

It provides only fair hay and silage.

Value as a standover or deferred feed

It becomes coarse and inedible if stood over.

Cultivars

No cultivars have yet been established, but Humphries (1959) recorded 150 distinct forms in the introductions into Australia.

Main attributes

Its ability to establish on hard stony soils and eroded land. Its drought tolerance and persistence.

Main deficiencies

Its poor and variable seed production and its variety of ecotypes.

Optimum temperature for growth

The seed germinates well over a range of 10- 40°C.

Minimum temperature for growth

Germination rates of seed are low below 25°C (McWilliam, Clements & Dowling, 1970).

Frost tolerance

It is sensitive to frost and is killed in a hard winter in the United States (Robinson & Potts, 1950) but gives some winter growth in South and Western Australia (Greenwood, 1966).

Palatability

It is not very palatable, except for the young growth after burning.

Response to photoperiod

Flowering is accelerated by short days (Evans, Wardlaw & Williams, 1964).

Chemical analysis and digestibility

Karue (1974) records 3.2 percent crude protein, 38.1 percent crude fibre, 45.6 percent nitrogen-free extract, 1.8 percent ether extract and 49.6 percent total digestible nutrients in the dry matter.

Natural habitat

Grassland, rocky places and open woodland.

Fertilizer requirements

It responds to a spring application of nitrogen. Two strains introduced to Australia, CPI.5786 and N.72, had low nitrogen requirements when heavily defoliated (Greenwood, 1966), but responded to summer applications and were affected by autumn applications in south-western Australia.

Genetics and reproduction

The chromosome numbers are 2n=30, 40, 44, 60 (Fedorov, 1974). It is apomictic.

Seed production and harvesting

Seed set is quite variable between plants and flowering is stimulated by decreasing temperature and rising humidity, or by increasing temperature and decreasing humidity (Robinson & Potts, 1950). It flowers over an extended period but is a poor and erratic seeder and sheds its seed readily (Barnard, 1969).

Economics

Besides being used for grazing, it is a useful thatching grass (Chippendall, 1955).

Animal production

A valuable fodder grass when young. Used for thatching, mat weaving and baskets. In the Hyparrhenia veld in Africa, cattle increase in weight and milk production from late November to March when pasture leaf protein is high (21 percent in late November, falling to 6 percent in early April). Thereafter, live weight and milk production decline (Smith, 1961).

Further reading

Greenwood, 1966; Robinson & Potts, 1950.

Value for erosion control

In southern Africa and the United States it is recognized as a useful conservation grass on hard stony soils and as a pioneer in vegetating eroded areas.

Tolerance to salinity

In south-western Australia, Rogers and Bailey (1963) found clones of CPI.5786 moderately tolerant.