Herbage digestibility, which to a large extent governs the animal's intake, is not easily predicted for
grazing animals, and can vary due to different grazing managements. The objective of this study was
to build a model for a range of defoliation managements, which takes account of vegetative grass tiller
structure, rather than dates of cutting or grazing, as done usually. An experiment was conducted in
1997, near Toulouse, to examine the digestibility of cocksfoot whole lamina and lamina segments
(15 cm) for three defoliation regimes. These regimes mimicked severe and lenient intermittent
defoliations plus a frequent defoliation treatment over a six-week period. Data were collected for (i)
lamina mass and digestibility for the youngest expanded lamina, (ii) lamina appearance rate, lamina
and sheath lengths.
Laminae digestibility, measured over time, varied greatly with the defoliation regime both for the
youngest full expanded lamina and all laminae on a tiller. Digestibility of the youngest fully expanded
lamina decreased from one leaf insertion level to the next, but this decrease was lowest when the
defoliation regime was frequent. There was also a consistent decrease in the digestibility of a lamina
from its tip to its base. Sheath and lamina lengths varied with treatment in a different way to lamina
digestibility. During frequent defoliation, sheath and lamina lengths both increased slightly while
they showed substantial increases in the two other treatments. Lamina length increased from one
insertion level to the next, and resulted in the addition of less digestible lamina segments rather than
reducing overall lamina digestibility. Sheath length, through its influence on leaf appearance rate and
lamina length, could be used to predict the digestibility of laminae over time according to leaf
insertion level and the difference in the digestibility observed from the tip to the base of a particular
lamina. Sheath length could therefore provide a basis for predicting the time course of grass
digestibility for different combinations of defoliation frequency and height.