Hardening Behavior, Winter Survival, and Forage Productivity of Festuca Species and Cultivars in Subarctic Alaska 1

Marginal to inadequate winterhardiness is a continuing problem in grasses used for forage production and turf purposes in subarctic, southcentral Alaska. Cultlvars or strains from various latitudinal sources within five Festuca species or subspecies were compared in field plots in Knik silt loam soi...

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Published in:Crop Science
Main Author: Klebesadel, L. J.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Wiley 1985
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.2135/cropsci1985.0011183x002500030004x
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.2135/cropsci1985.0011183X002500030004x
id crwiley:10.2135/cropsci1985.0011183x002500030004x
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spelling crwiley:10.2135/cropsci1985.0011183x002500030004x 2023-12-03T10:30:53+01:00 Hardening Behavior, Winter Survival, and Forage Productivity of Festuca Species and Cultivars in Subarctic Alaska 1 Klebesadel, L. J. 1985 http://dx.doi.org/10.2135/cropsci1985.0011183x002500030004x https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.2135/cropsci1985.0011183X002500030004x en eng Wiley http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/termsAndConditions#vor Crop Science volume 25, issue 3, page 441-447 ISSN 0011-183X 1435-0653 Agronomy and Crop Science journal-article 1985 crwiley https://doi.org/10.2135/cropsci1985.0011183x002500030004x 2023-11-09T14:36:12Z Marginal to inadequate winterhardiness is a continuing problem in grasses used for forage production and turf purposes in subarctic, southcentral Alaska. Cultlvars or strains from various latitudinal sources within five Festuca species or subspecies were compared in field plots in Knik silt loam soil (coarse‐silty over sandy or sandy‐skeletal, mixed, nonacid Typic Cryorthent) over 18 experiment‐years for relative winterhardiness and forage production. Also three red fescues (F. rubra L.) of diverse latitudinal adaptation and differing widely in winterhardiness here (cvs. Arctared, Duraturf, Illahee) were compared for changes dry matter concentration in crown tissues during winterhardening, food reserves stored by onset of winter, and winter survival of plants left in the field. All broad‐leaved fescues evaluated; including meadow fescue (F. elatior L.) strains ‘Bottnia II’, ‘Tammisto’, ‘An‐2356’, and commercial, and tall fescue (F. arundi . nacea Schreb.) cv. Alta; winterkilled completely during the first or second winter of each test. Fine‐leaved fescues generally deficient in winterhardiness included ‘Highlight’ and commercial chewings fescue (F. rubra var. commutata Gaud.), ‘Durar’ hard fescue [F. ovina var. duriuscula (L.) Koch], and red fescue cultivars from the conterminous 48 states (‘Ranier’, ‘Pennlawn’, Illahee) and from Canada (‘Boreal’, ‘Olds’). Duraturf, selected in Canada from germplasm of Scandinavian origin, was the most winterhardly of introduced cultivars, but it was not as hardy or productive of forage as the extremely winterhardy, subarctic adapted Arctared, developed in Alaska. Hardiness ranking of red fescue cultivars was Arctared > Duraturf > Boreal ≥ Olds > Ranier = Pennlawn > lllahe. Arctared, selected for turf characteristics, produced as much forage as ‘Polar’ bromegrass (predominantly Bromus inermis Leyss ✕ B. pumpellianus Scribn.), an Alaskan cultivar selected for forage productivity. Superior winterhardines of Arctared was associated with northernmost ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Subarctic Alaska Wiley Online Library (via Crossref) Alta Canada Crop Science 25 3 441 447
institution Open Polar
collection Wiley Online Library (via Crossref)
op_collection_id crwiley
language English
topic Agronomy and Crop Science
spellingShingle Agronomy and Crop Science
Klebesadel, L. J.
Hardening Behavior, Winter Survival, and Forage Productivity of Festuca Species and Cultivars in Subarctic Alaska 1
topic_facet Agronomy and Crop Science
description Marginal to inadequate winterhardiness is a continuing problem in grasses used for forage production and turf purposes in subarctic, southcentral Alaska. Cultlvars or strains from various latitudinal sources within five Festuca species or subspecies were compared in field plots in Knik silt loam soil (coarse‐silty over sandy or sandy‐skeletal, mixed, nonacid Typic Cryorthent) over 18 experiment‐years for relative winterhardiness and forage production. Also three red fescues (F. rubra L.) of diverse latitudinal adaptation and differing widely in winterhardiness here (cvs. Arctared, Duraturf, Illahee) were compared for changes dry matter concentration in crown tissues during winterhardening, food reserves stored by onset of winter, and winter survival of plants left in the field. All broad‐leaved fescues evaluated; including meadow fescue (F. elatior L.) strains ‘Bottnia II’, ‘Tammisto’, ‘An‐2356’, and commercial, and tall fescue (F. arundi . nacea Schreb.) cv. Alta; winterkilled completely during the first or second winter of each test. Fine‐leaved fescues generally deficient in winterhardiness included ‘Highlight’ and commercial chewings fescue (F. rubra var. commutata Gaud.), ‘Durar’ hard fescue [F. ovina var. duriuscula (L.) Koch], and red fescue cultivars from the conterminous 48 states (‘Ranier’, ‘Pennlawn’, Illahee) and from Canada (‘Boreal’, ‘Olds’). Duraturf, selected in Canada from germplasm of Scandinavian origin, was the most winterhardly of introduced cultivars, but it was not as hardy or productive of forage as the extremely winterhardy, subarctic adapted Arctared, developed in Alaska. Hardiness ranking of red fescue cultivars was Arctared > Duraturf > Boreal ≥ Olds > Ranier = Pennlawn > lllahe. Arctared, selected for turf characteristics, produced as much forage as ‘Polar’ bromegrass (predominantly Bromus inermis Leyss ✕ B. pumpellianus Scribn.), an Alaskan cultivar selected for forage productivity. Superior winterhardines of Arctared was associated with northernmost ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Klebesadel, L. J.
author_facet Klebesadel, L. J.
author_sort Klebesadel, L. J.
title Hardening Behavior, Winter Survival, and Forage Productivity of Festuca Species and Cultivars in Subarctic Alaska 1
title_short Hardening Behavior, Winter Survival, and Forage Productivity of Festuca Species and Cultivars in Subarctic Alaska 1
title_full Hardening Behavior, Winter Survival, and Forage Productivity of Festuca Species and Cultivars in Subarctic Alaska 1
title_fullStr Hardening Behavior, Winter Survival, and Forage Productivity of Festuca Species and Cultivars in Subarctic Alaska 1
title_full_unstemmed Hardening Behavior, Winter Survival, and Forage Productivity of Festuca Species and Cultivars in Subarctic Alaska 1
title_sort hardening behavior, winter survival, and forage productivity of festuca species and cultivars in subarctic alaska 1
publisher Wiley
publishDate 1985
url http://dx.doi.org/10.2135/cropsci1985.0011183x002500030004x
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.2135/cropsci1985.0011183X002500030004x
geographic Alta
Canada
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Canada
genre Subarctic
Alaska
genre_facet Subarctic
Alaska
op_source Crop Science
volume 25, issue 3, page 441-447
ISSN 0011-183X 1435-0653
op_rights http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/termsAndConditions#vor
op_doi https://doi.org/10.2135/cropsci1985.0011183x002500030004x
container_title Crop Science
container_volume 25
container_issue 3
container_start_page 441
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