By David Davenport, Rural Solutions SA
Drought equals low profits, wind erosion and shortage of feed - or does it?
Putting perennial plant systems such as lucerne and fodder shrubs into your farm system can:
So why are they not planted more? The usual reasons are:
Work conducted on Eyre Peninsula is supporting these claims. Using land capability as a criteria for selection, marginal cropping ground (deep sands) have been planted to lucerne. The photos below of two similar sites on eastern Eyre Peninsula were taken in September and illustrate what can happen.

The lucerne site illustrated had sample pasture cuts taken on 19 November 2002, three weeks after hard grazing without any rainfall and gave over 1 t/ha of dry matter! A lucerne pasture on sand over clay at Edillilie with the same grazing gave over 2t/ha of dry matter!!
Obviously the production level is related to groundwater availability. Lucerne pastures where subsoil barriers restrict root development and older lucerne pastures which may previously have dried the profile may not provide this level of feed in a dry year but there is at least the potential to obtain some return and provide good ground cover.
The bottom line is that perennial plant systems can reduce the impact of drought and provide farmers with greater flexibility to handle these years. Lucerne and fodder crops are they not worth considering?