Fatty Acid and Sugar Content in White Clover in Relation to Frost Tolerance and Ice-encasement Tolerance

Physiological characters relating to winter survival were measured in stolons of three white clover populations. Plants were grown in pots and hardened naturally outside in Iceland (66°N); samples were taken on three occasions from autumn to spring. The cultivar AberHerald was compared with a popula...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Annals of Botany
Main Authors: Dalmannsdóttir, Sigridur, Helgadóttir, Áslaug, Gudleifsson, Bjarni E.
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Oxford University Press 2001
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Online Access:http://aob.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/short/88/suppl_1/753
https://doi.org/10.1006/anbo.2001.1465
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Summary:Physiological characters relating to winter survival were measured in stolons of three white clover populations. Plants were grown in pots and hardened naturally outside in Iceland (66°N); samples were taken on three occasions from autumn to spring. The cultivar AberHerald was compared with a population that had survived one winter in experimental plots in southern Iceland (AberHerald selected) and an indigenous population from Norway (HoKv9238). Frost tolerance and ice-encasement tolerance were determined in the laboratory using meristematic stolon cuttings, and the temperature and number of days required to kill 50% of the population were calculated. Fatty acid and sugar contents of stolons were measured in the same material. The Norwegian population HoKv9238 was much more winter-hardy than the AberHerald populations and its stolons had a higher dry matter percentage. Total amounts of unsaturated fatty acids were higher in HoKv9238 than in AberHerald populations, with differences being most prominent for the 18:2 fatty acid. In September, the starch content was significantly higher in stolons of HoKv9238 than in those of the two AberHerald populations, but by January the starch content had decreased drastically, especially in HoKv9238. Sucrose was the most abundant water-soluble carbohydrate: in September, populations had similar sucrose contents but levels had decreased by January in AberHerald populations but not in HoKv9238. Comparison of the two AberHerald populations showed that the selected population was more frost- and ice-encasement tolerant than the original population in autumn. This coincided with higher levels of the 18:2 fatty acid.