Adaptability and phenotypic stability of Lolium perenne L. cultivars of diverse origin grown at the margin of the species distribution

In northern countries, Lolium perenne L. generally survives poorly when grown inland and north of 60°N because of extensive winter damage. With the projected future climate change, it could become a promising option for improving production efficiency of the agricultural sector in these regions. Her...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of Agronomy and Crop Science
Main Authors: Helgadóttir, Á, Aavola, R, Isolahti, M, Marum, P, Persson, C, Aleliūnas, Andrius, Brazauskas, Gintaras, Krisjánsdóttir, T. A, Asp, T, Rognli, O. A
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2018
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Online Access:http://lammc.lvb.lt/LAMMC:ELABAPDB32273964&prefLang=en_US
Description
Summary:In northern countries, Lolium perenne L. generally survives poorly when grown inland and north of 60°N because of extensive winter damage. With the projected future climate change, it could become a promising option for improving production efficiency of the agricultural sector in these regions. Here, we compare the biomass production potential of cultivars of diverse origin across five locations stretching from Estonia to Iceland over a period of three harvest years, and their freezing tolerance under artificial conditions. The aim was to relate the observed pattern of adaptation to the geographic origin of the cultivars and their response to prevailing agroclimatic conditions. Significant interactions were observed between cultivars and test environments (locations × years), and significant interactions between cultivars and years were detected at four of the five locations. Models of joint regression, additive main effects and multiplicative interaction (AMMI) and factorial regression using several agroclimatic indices showed that cultivars developed in northern countries showed greater yield potential across the test environments and were, thus, generally better adapted than cultivars from Central Europe. Diploid cultivars were more frost tolerant than tetraploid cultivars giving them an advantage in locations which were characterized by low temperatures during the hardening period in autumn and mild and rainy winters, such as at the Icelandic location. Only a few cultivars showed general adaptability to the environmental conditions at the test sites, the most stable cultivar being an admixture of diploids and tetraploids. In future breeding, the best strategy would be to hybridize cultivars developed in northern countries with more exotic materials that combine high yield potential, adequate winter survival and superior disease resistance under northern conditions.