Rangeland Ecology & Management

Get reliable science

Adaptation of perennial triticeae to the eastern Central Great Plains
Author
Vogel, K. P.
Jensen, K. J.
Publisher
Society for Range Management
Publication Year
2001-11-01
Body

The tribe Triticeae contains over 250 perennial species that are components of grasslands in the temperate and sub-arctic regions of the world and includes some of the world's most valuable forage and rangeland species. Many of these species had not been evaluated previously in the Central Great Plains, USA. A subset of the germplasm of the tribe Triticeae which included over 100 accessions of 55 different species was evaluated in a replicated, space-planted trial in eastern Nebraska during 1994-1996 to determine the survival and forage productivity of the accessions. The evaluated accessions were representative of perennial Triticeae genera and genomes. Perennial grasses of the Triticeae are based on the P, St, H, Ns, E, W, Y genomes and an unknown Xm genome(s). Triticeae that survived and had acceptable forage yields during the period of the trial were the Agropyron's-crested wheatgrasses (PP and PPPP genomes), Psathyrostachys-Russian wildryes (NsNs genomes), Thinopyron's-intermediate and tall wheatgrasses (EEEEStSt and EEEEEEStSt genomes), some Elymus (StStHH genomes), several Leymus (NsNsXmXm genomes), and Pascopyrum-western wheatgrass (StStHHNsNsXmXm genomes). Several Leymus species had not been evaluated previously in this region but showed considerable potential and merit additional evaluation, including L. chinensis, L. akmolinensi, L. racemosus, L. sabulosus, and L. secalinus. Species with only the H genome (Hordeum) and St genome (Pseudoroegneria) were not adapted to the region because of poor survival or low productivity. The study provides an example of how the rapidly emerging field of genomics can have practical applications to grasslands and rangelands. The Journal of Range Management archives are made available by the Society for Range Management and the University of Arizona Libraries. Contact lbry-journals@email.arizona.edu for further information. Migrated from OJS platform August 2020

Language
en
Resource Type
Text
Document Type
Journal Issue/Article
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)
10.2307/4003670
Additional Information
Vogel, K. P., & Jensen, K. J. (2001). Adaptation of perennial triticeae to the eastern Central Great Plains. Journal of Range Management, 54(6), 674-679.
IISN
0022-409X
OAI Identifier
oai:repository.arizona.edu:10150/643609
Journal Volume
54
Journal Number
6
Journal Pages
674-679
Journal Name
Journal of Range Management
Keywords
Elymus
plant introduction
germplasm
Hordeum
Leymus
Psathyrostachys
Elytrigia
genome
germplasm evaluation
Agropyron
plant genetic resources
mortality
yields
adaptation
Nebraska
precipitation
introduced species
grasses
forage
Triticeae
Agropyron
Thinopyrum
Elymus
Leymus
Pascopyrum
survival
forage yield