Logo image
Economic analysis of benefits from grazing unharvested standing lupin crops in a mixed farm enterprise in south-west Western Australia
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Economic analysis of benefits from grazing unharvested standing lupin crops in a mixed farm enterprise in south-west Western Australia

Amelia Gooding, Serina Hancock, Andrew N Thompson and John Young
Animal Production Science, Vol.65(9), AN25057
2025
pdf
Published333.27 kBDownloadView
CC BY-NC-ND V4.0 Open Access

Abstract

Australian Farm Optimisation model farm modelling fodder crop livestock profit mixed farming system sheep stocking rate weaners
Context In the south-west of Western Australia, weaned lambs typically graze dry annual pastures and crop stubbles during late spring, summer and autumn (October–March). The low energy and protein content of these feeds typically means that lambs are supplemented with concentrates to achieve target growth rates. Fully mature, standing lupin crops that could be harvested may provide higher quality feed than dry pasture and crop stubbles over this period. Aims This study tested the hypothesis that the incorporation of standing lupin crops for grazing will increase whole-farm profitability. Furthermore, we aimed to quantify the relative contributions of stocking rate, sale value of lambs, weaner survival rate and ewe lamb reproduction to this increase in farm profit. Methods Whole-farm bioeconomic modelling was used to assess the profitability of grazing standing lupin crops in a mixed farming system. An analysis was conducted for a representative mixed farm in south-west Western Australia with a self-replacing Merino flock, and the profitability of grazing a lupin crop was assessed on the basis of whether it was harvested or grazed. A sensitivity analysis was then carried out to test the robustness of the results and understand the role of standing lupin crops in a mixed farming system. Key results Grazing lupins grown on 7% of the total farm area increased whole-farm profitability by almost A$30,000 or A$200/ha of standing crop. In this environment, across a range of assumed crop yields and prices, it was always more profitable to graze standing lupins rather than harvest the lupins. The increase in profit was primarily due to an increase in stocking rate of 1.2 dry sheep equivalent per hectare when able to graze the optimum area of standing lupins compared to when there was no standing crop. In addition to the increase in stocking rate, revenue from sheep sales increased, with the Merino wether and mixed sex crossbred weaners sold for an extra A$13 per lamb when stocking rate was constrained to the optimum for when there was no standing lupin crop. Conclusions This analysis demonstrated that in the south-west of Western Australia, grazing standing lupin crops was always more profitable than harvesting the grain. Implications If lupins are included in crop rotations in this environment, profit will be increased if they are grazed, but it is also clear that stocking rate should be increased to fully capitalise on potential gains in farm profit.

Details

UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

This output has contributed to the advancement of the following goals:

#12 Responsible Consumption & Production

Metrics

6 File views/ downloads
21 Record Views

InCites Highlights

These are selected metrics from InCites Benchmarking & Analytics tool, related to this output

Citation topics
3 Agriculture, Environment & Ecology
3.51 Dairy & Animal Sciences
3.51.84 Ruminant Nutrition
Web Of Science research areas
Agriculture, Dairy & Animal Science
ESI research areas
Agricultural Sciences
Logo image