On Grasshopper mowers they list the hyd oil changed at 1000 hrs. I asked the tech/dealer how they came to that number. He said at one time they had nothing published for change of hyd oil. They got so many folks asking when/ why etc. the engineers said 1000 just to satisfy the folks. Engineering also said they'd prefer 1500 hours because the greatest chances of problems is when the system is opened. If it's not leaking leave it alone was his final comment.
You are compariimg apples and oranges.
Zero turns fall into two basic categories. Lower end models typically use a sealed belt driven hydrostatic transaxle. Higher end models (e.g the Gtasshopper G2 and G3) use a standalone belt driven hydraulic pump and individual wheel motors.
Zero turns also dont have wet brakes and PTO clutches that shear the oil and load it up with wear particles.
A Kubota HST tractor is an entirely different concept. The HST pump shares a common sump with the brakes, clutches, and auxilliary hydraulics. It is directly coupled to a hydraulic motor that shares that same sump as the implement and power steering pumps and powers the wheels via a driveshaft, differential, axles, and reduction gears. All of those things generate wear particles and contribute to oil breakdown and oxidation far in excess of anything in a ZTR.
The oil used in a Kubota HST has to do many things and it sees far more contamination than any zero turn. A Kubota HST is also far more work and expensive to repair when/if it does fail.
Personally I will change the oil and filters in my Kubota HST(s) at factory recommended intervals. If you do a little research I think you will find the other compact tractor OEMs have very similar schedules.
You are certainly free to adopt the schedule and fluid recommendations promulgated by Grasshopper, Skag, Gravely, Bad Boy, Cub Cadet or any of the other ZTR or lawn tractor companies but dont fool yourself into thinking they are comparable systems.
Dan