Abstract:
Productivity of grain crops and grazed pastures inevitably declines without soil nutrient replacement and may
eventually make these enterprises unprofitable. We monitored these declines in north-eastern Australia during 23 years
after clearing 2 of 3 adjacent brigalow catchments, in order to define the productivity levels of developed brigalow land
over time. One catchment (11.7 ha) was used for grain production and another (12.7 ha) for beef production from a
sown buffel grass pasture. There was no upward or downward trend in annual rainfall amounts throughout the study
period. In the cropped catchment, grain yield from 14 winter crops without added nutrients declined significantly in
20 years from 2.9 to 1.1 t/ha.year on the upper-slope clay soil (92 kg/ha.year) and from 2.4 to 0.6 t/ha.year on the Sodosol
(88 kg/ha.year). Crop production per year declined by 20% between 2 successive 10-year periods. Wheat grain protein
content also declined with time, falling below the critical value for adequate soil N supply (11.5%) 12 years after clearing
on the Sodosol and 16 years after clearing on the clay soil. Such declines in grain quantity and quality without applied
fertiliser reduce profitability. The initial pasture dry matter on offer of 8 t/ha had halved 3 years after clearing, and
a decline in cattle liveweight gain of 4 kg/ha.year was observed over an 8-year period with constant stocking of 0.59
head/ha. Due to fluctuating stocking rate levels of 0.3–0.7 head/ha over the trial period, liveweight productivity trends
are attributed to the multiple effects of stocking rate changes and fertility decline. The amount of nitrogen exported
from the cleared catchments was 36.1 kg/ha.year in grain but only 1.6 kg/ha.year in cattle (as liveweight gain). Total
soil N at 0–0.3m declined by 84 kg/ha.year under cropping but there was no significant decline under grazing. The
soil nutrients removed during grain and beef production need to be replaced in order to avert productivity decline
post-clearing