Verano Stylo
Caribbean

Scientific name(s)
Stylosanthes hamata

Strengths

  • Can be over sown into native pasture or grown with sown grasses.
  • Grows on low fertility soils.
  • Highly persistent under grazing.
  • Little effect of anthracnose diseas

Limitations

  • Intolerant of waterlogging.
  • Frost sensitive.
  • Restricted to warmer environments.

Plant description

Plant: Annual or short-lived, much-branched, prostrate to semi-erect perennial legume, growing to about 75cm tall.

Stems: Younger stems are fine and green, with fine white hairs down one side (but no bristles as in Townsville stylo).

Leaves: Comprising three narrow, pointed leaflets 1.5 to 2.5cm long.

Flowers: Small (4 -5mm wide), mainly yellow, pea-like flowers with red markings.

Pods: Comprising two single-seeded segments 4 – 7mm long, the upper segment bearing a short hook.

Seeds: Fawn to brown or maroon in colour (often mottled), with about 270,000 seeds-in-pod or 450,000 dehulled seeds/kg. May have high levels of hard seed.

Pasture type and use

It is often sown into native pasture in the seasonally dry and wet tropics, and warmer subtropics, and provides a useful component in mixed introduced grass/legume permanent pasture.

Where it grows

Rainfall
Although mostly sown in areas receiving 700 – 900mm average annual rainfall, it may also be successful at lower (to 500mm) and higher (to 2,000mm) annual rainfalls.

Soils
It grows well on most soils with pH of 5.4 to 8.0, but not on heavy clays.

Temperature
Very susceptible to frosting.

Establishment

Companion species
Grasses: Swann forest bluegrass, Indian bluegrass (Indian couch), Saraji and Nixon sabigrass.

Legumes: American jointvetch, cassia, stylo, shrubby stylo.

Sowing/planting rates as single species
Up to 4 kg seed-in-pod/ha (IMPORTANT – need higher levels of commercially coated seed to give similar number of seeds/unit area.)

Sowing/planting rates in mixtures
1 – 2 kg seed-in-pod/ha (IMPORTANT – need higher levels of commercially coated seed to give similar number of seeds/unit area).

Sowing time
Best sown at the end of the dry season.

Inoculation
While the specific inoculum (CB 1650) is most effective for Verano stylo, Group M inoculum (CB 756) can be used if CB 1650 not available.

Fertiliser
Although it is adapted to soils low in available soil phosphorus, an application of 100 – 200 kg/ha superphosphate at sowing will be beneficial on very infertile soils. Molybdenum (Mo) and sulphur (S) may also be necessary in some situations.

Management

Maintenance fertiliser
An application of 100 – 200 kg/ha superphosphate every 2 or 3 years after establishment (to maintain available soil P levels at about 8 ppm (mg/kg)) should improve both plant and animal performance.

Grazing/cutting
Verano stylo is tolerant of heavy grazing. Stocking rate should be adjusted to reduce competition from associated grass especially early in the growing season, although prolonged heavy grazing can reduce the density of the grass.

Ability to spread
Verano stylo is spread by seed:

• through the gut by grazing cattle,
• by water movement,
• by the hook on the upper pod segment

Weed potential
It is now widespread, but is not considered a serious weed.

Major pests
There are no major insect pests.

Major diseases
Botrytis head blight is particularly serious in seed crops during periods of high rainfall as it causes death of the flower head. Web blight can damage vegetative growth during wet weather. Anthracnose, which attacks other stylos, is not a problem at this stage.

Herbicide susceptibility
Susceptible to metsulfuron-methyl (e.g. Brushoff®, Ally®).

Animal production

Feeding value
Digestibility of top-growth is of the order of 60-65%. Crude protein levels range from 17 – 24% in green leaf and 6 – 12% in the stem depending on age of regrowth and general growing conditions. Nutritive value declines rapidly with the onset of dry season leaf drop.

Palatability
Very palatable

Production potential
Liveweight gains are usually in the range of 140 – 160 and up to 200 kg/hd/yr depending on stocking rates, growing conditions and mineral limitations. They can be as low as 100 kg/hd/yr on low fertility soils.

Livestock disorders/toxicity
None recorded.