Home > Agriculture > Series3 > Vol. 8 > No. 3
Journal of the Department of Agriculture, Western Australia, Series 3
Keywords
Pasture management, Kimberley wallaroo, Sheep grazing
First Page Number
273
Last Page Number
286
ISSN
0021-8618
Abstract
OVER the past 20 years sheep numbers in the North-West of Western Australia have suffered a marked decline. In the Pilbara area, six stations have been abandoned, and about a dozen more are in a precarious position. If these were to be abandoned also, some 10,000,000 acres of sheep country would be idle. It is now known that the shrinking flocks have been caused by a deterioration in the pasture vegetation, particularly the disappearance of the more nutritious native grasses on which breeding ewes depended to provide the high-protein diet required for the production and rearing of their lambs.
Recommended Citation
Ealey, E. H.M. and Suijdendorp, H.
(1959)
"Pasture management and the Euro problem in the North-West,"
Journal of the Department of Agriculture, Western Australia, Series 3: Vol. 8:
No.
3, Article 6.
Available at:
https://library.dpird.wa.gov.au/journal_agriculture3/vol8/iss3/6