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Alfalfa

Alfalfa: Encyclopedia - Alfalfa

Medicago arabica Medicago heldreichii Medicago hybrida Medicago laciniata Medicago littoralis Medicago lupulina Medicago minima Medicago monantha Medicago monspeliaca Medicago orbicularis Medicago polymorpha Medicago praecox Medicago rigidula Medicago rugosa Medicago ruthenica Medicago sativa Medicago scutellata Medicago ...

Including:

Alfalfa, Alfalfa - Culture, Alfalfa - Harvesting, Alfalfa - Varieties

Alfalfa: Encyclopedia - Alfalfa



Alfalfa

Medicago arabica
Medicago heldreichii
Medicago hybrida
Medicago laciniata
Medicago littoralis
Medicago lupulina
Medicago minima
Medicago monantha
Medicago monspeliaca
Medicago orbicularis
Medicago polymorpha
Medicago praecox
Medicago rigidula
Medicago rugosa
Medicago ruthenica
Medicago sativa
Medicago scutellata
Medicago secundiflora
Medicago truncatula
Medicago turbinata

For the Our Gang (Little Rascals) character, see Carl Switzer.

Alfalfa (family: Fabaceae, the pea family) is a genus of perennial flowering plant, Medicago, most commonly referring to M. sativa L., also called lucerne.

Alfalfa is a perennial plant, living from five to twelve years, depending on variety and climate. It is a cool season perennial legume, growing to a height of 1 metre. It resembles clover with clusters of small purple flowers. It also has a deep root system sometimes stretching to 4.5 metres. This makes it very resilient, especially to droughts.

Alfalfa or Lucerne (Medicago sativa) as its genus name (Medicago) suggests is native to Iran (Persia-Media). It came to Greece around 490 B.C. as a horse feed for persian army. It was introduced from Chile to the United States around 1860. It is widely grown throughout the world as forage for cattle, and is most often harvested as hay. Alfalfa has the highest feeding value of all common hay crops, being used less frequently as pasture or haylage. Like other legumes, its root nodules contain bacteria, like Rhizobium, with the ability to fix nitrogen, producing a high-protein feed regardless of available nitrogen in the soil.

Its wide cultivation beginning in the seventeenth century was an important advance in European agriculture. Its symbiotic relationship with nitrogen-fixing bacteria and use as animal feed greatly improved agricultural efficiency. When grown on soils where it is well-adapted, alfalfa is the highest yielding forage plant.

Alfalfa is one of the few plants that exhibit autotoxicity. Alfalfa seed will not grow in existing stands of alfalfa because of this. Therefore, alfalfa fields must be plowed down or rotated before reseeding.

Alfalfa sprouts are used as a salad ingredient in the United States and Australia. Tender shoots are eaten in some places as a leaf vegetable. Human consumption of older plant parts is limited primarily by very high fiber content. Alfalfa has the potential to be the most prolific of all leaf vegetable crops, processed by drying and grinding into powder, or by pulping to extract leaf concentrate [1].

Alfalfa is believed to be a galactagogue.

In the United States, the leading Alfalfa growing states are Wisconsin and California, with most of the latter state's production occurring in the Mojave Desert by means of irrigation provided by the California Aqueduct.

A few other species of Medicago are called alfalfa; others are called medick, barrelclover, or burclover.

Alfalfa - Culture

Alfalfa can be sown spring or fall, and does best on well-drained soils with a neutral pH of 6.8-7.5. Alfalfa requires a great deal of potash; soils low in fertility should be fertilized with manure or a chemical fertilizer. Usually a seeding rate of 13 - 17 kg/hectare (12 - 15 lb/acre) in climatic acceptable regions and a rate of 22 kg/hectare (20 lb/acre) in southern regions is used. A nurse crop is often used, particularly for spring plantings, to reduce weed problems. Herbicides are sometimes used instead.

In most climates, alfalfa is cut three or four times a year. Total yields are typically around 1 tonne/hectare (4 ton/acre) but vary regionally and with weather, and with stage of maturity when cut. Later cuttings improve yield but reduce nutritional content.

The potatoe leafhopper can reduce alfalfa yields dramatically, particularly with the second cutting when weather is warmest. Chemical controls are sometimes used to prevent this. Alfalfa is also susceptible to Texas Root Rot. Medicago species are also eaten by the larvae of some Lepidoptera species including Common Swift, The Flame, Latticed Heath, Lime-speck Pug, The Nutmeg, Setaceous Hebrew Character and Turnip Moth.

Alfalfa seed production requires cultured pollinators to be provided for the fields when in bloom. The pollinator of choice are the ground nesting alfalfa leafcutter bee, which is cultured in special beds near the seed fields, or honeybees which are trucked to the fields when needed.

Alfalfa - Harvesting

When alfalfa is to be used as hay, it is usually cut and baled. Loose haystacks are still used in some areas, but bales are much easier to transport. Ideally, the hay is cut just as the field is beginning to flower. When using farm equipment rather than hand-harvesting, the process begins with a swather, which cuts the alfalfa and arranges it in windrows. After it has dried, a tractor pulling a baler collects the hay into bales. There are three types of bales commonly used for alfalfa. Small "square" bales--actually rectilinear, and typically about 40 x 45 x 100 cm (15 in x 18 in x 38 in)--are used for small animals and individual horses. The small square bales weigh between 25-30 kg (50-70 pounds) depending on moisture, and can easily be hand separated into "flakes".

Cattle ranches use large round bales, typically 1.4 to 1.8 m (4.5 to 6 feet) in diameter and weighing up to 500-1,000 kg. These bales can be placed in stable stacks, placed in large feeders for herds of horses, and unrolled on the ground for large herds of cattle. The bales can be loaded and stacked using a spike on a tractor that pierces the center of the bale, or with a grapple (claw) on the tractor's front-end loader.

A more recent innovation is large "square" bales, roughly the same proportions as the small squares, but much larger. The bale size was set so that stacks would fit perfectly on a large flatbed truck.

Alfalfa - Varieties

Considerable research and development has been done with this important plant. The cultivar 'Vernal' was introduced c. 1953 and was the standard for years to come. Many better public and private varieties are available now, and are adapted to the needs of particular climates.

Most of the improvements in alfalfa over the last decades have been in disease resistance, improved ability to overwinter in cold climates, and multileaf traits. Disease resistance is important because it improves the usefulness of alfalfa on poorly drained soils, and during wet years.

Multileaf alfalfa has more than three leaflets per leaf. It has a higher nutitional content by weight because there is relatively more leafy matter for the same amount of stem.




Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Alfalfa", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki

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