Cold Hardiness, 13c Discrimination and Water Use Efficiency of Perennial Ryegrass Genotypes in Response to Wilt-Based Irrigation

Perennial ryegrass (Lolium perenne L.) is a cool-season turfgrass susceptible to low temperature injury. Wilt-based (WB) irrigation is a common practice in scheduling turf irrigation as an alternative to well-watered (WW). Moisture stress has been shown to promote cold hardiness but this has not bee...

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Main Author: Lanier, Jason D
Format: Others
Published: ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarworks.umass.edu/theses/427
https://scholarworks.umass.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1510&context=theses
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spelling ndltd-UMASS-oai-scholarworks.umass.edu-theses-15102020-12-02T14:44:03Z Cold Hardiness, 13c Discrimination and Water Use Efficiency of Perennial Ryegrass Genotypes in Response to Wilt-Based Irrigation Lanier, Jason D Perennial ryegrass (Lolium perenne L.) is a cool-season turfgrass susceptible to low temperature injury. Wilt-based (WB) irrigation is a common practice in scheduling turf irrigation as an alternative to well-watered (WW). Moisture stress has been shown to promote cold hardiness but this has not been investigated in response to WB irrigation. Measurements of 13C isotope discrimination (DELTA) are useful predictors of water use efficiency (WUE), drought resistance, evapotranspiration (ET) and salinity tolerance but the relevance to turfgrass cold hardiness has not been determined. DELTA analyses may enable more efficient screening protocols in breeding for improved cold hardiness. Objectives of this study were to examine perennial ryegrass genotypes in relation to cold hardiness, DELTA and WUE in response to WW and WB irrigation schedules, to compare genetic diversity between top-performing (TP) and bottom-performing (BP) perennial ryegrass genotypes, and to assess the predictive value of DELTA of for cold hardiness. Six genotypes were selected based on turf quality from the most northern NTEP location (Orono, ME) and included three TP (‘All Star 2’, ‘Mach I’ and ‘Sunkissed’) and three BP (‘APR-1234’, ‘Buccaneer’ and ‘WVPB-R-82’) genotypes. ET, yield, WUE, shoot water content, rooting potential, wilting tendency, DELTA and median lethal temperatures (LT50) using whole-plant survival were measured from greenhouse samples grown in weighing lysimeters in 2007 and 2008. Plant measurements in both years were based on sampling conducted at the last cycle after 68-d of irrigation with 100% of ET applied at leaf-roll (WB) versus ET replacement every 4-d (WW). Lower LT50 values were generally associated with low yield, low WUE and low shoot water content, whether the result of irrigation treatment or genotypic variation. TP genotypes demonstrated significantly lower LT50 temperatures (greater cold hardiness) in comparison to BP genotypes in both years. Modest cold hardiness enhancement with WB irrigation was highest for TP genotypes. Wilting tendency and DELTA were not reliable predictors of cold hardiness, although individual TP genotypes exhibited responses distinctly different than some BP genotypes. Further research is needed to investigate the physiological mechanisms of enhanced turfgrass cold hardiness in response to moisture stress. 2010-01-01T08:00:00Z text application/pdf https://scholarworks.umass.edu/theses/427 https://scholarworks.umass.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1510&context=theses Masters Theses 1911 - February 2014 ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst turfgrass irrigation wilt cold hardiness water use efficiency carbon isotope discrimination Agronomy Agronomy and Crop Sciences
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic turfgrass
irrigation
wilt
cold hardiness
water use efficiency
carbon isotope discrimination
Agronomy
Agronomy and Crop Sciences
spellingShingle turfgrass
irrigation
wilt
cold hardiness
water use efficiency
carbon isotope discrimination
Agronomy
Agronomy and Crop Sciences
Lanier, Jason D
Cold Hardiness, 13c Discrimination and Water Use Efficiency of Perennial Ryegrass Genotypes in Response to Wilt-Based Irrigation
description Perennial ryegrass (Lolium perenne L.) is a cool-season turfgrass susceptible to low temperature injury. Wilt-based (WB) irrigation is a common practice in scheduling turf irrigation as an alternative to well-watered (WW). Moisture stress has been shown to promote cold hardiness but this has not been investigated in response to WB irrigation. Measurements of 13C isotope discrimination (DELTA) are useful predictors of water use efficiency (WUE), drought resistance, evapotranspiration (ET) and salinity tolerance but the relevance to turfgrass cold hardiness has not been determined. DELTA analyses may enable more efficient screening protocols in breeding for improved cold hardiness. Objectives of this study were to examine perennial ryegrass genotypes in relation to cold hardiness, DELTA and WUE in response to WW and WB irrigation schedules, to compare genetic diversity between top-performing (TP) and bottom-performing (BP) perennial ryegrass genotypes, and to assess the predictive value of DELTA of for cold hardiness. Six genotypes were selected based on turf quality from the most northern NTEP location (Orono, ME) and included three TP (‘All Star 2’, ‘Mach I’ and ‘Sunkissed’) and three BP (‘APR-1234’, ‘Buccaneer’ and ‘WVPB-R-82’) genotypes. ET, yield, WUE, shoot water content, rooting potential, wilting tendency, DELTA and median lethal temperatures (LT50) using whole-plant survival were measured from greenhouse samples grown in weighing lysimeters in 2007 and 2008. Plant measurements in both years were based on sampling conducted at the last cycle after 68-d of irrigation with 100% of ET applied at leaf-roll (WB) versus ET replacement every 4-d (WW). Lower LT50 values were generally associated with low yield, low WUE and low shoot water content, whether the result of irrigation treatment or genotypic variation. TP genotypes demonstrated significantly lower LT50 temperatures (greater cold hardiness) in comparison to BP genotypes in both years. Modest cold hardiness enhancement with WB irrigation was highest for TP genotypes. Wilting tendency and DELTA were not reliable predictors of cold hardiness, although individual TP genotypes exhibited responses distinctly different than some BP genotypes. Further research is needed to investigate the physiological mechanisms of enhanced turfgrass cold hardiness in response to moisture stress.
author Lanier, Jason D
author_facet Lanier, Jason D
author_sort Lanier, Jason D
title Cold Hardiness, 13c Discrimination and Water Use Efficiency of Perennial Ryegrass Genotypes in Response to Wilt-Based Irrigation
title_short Cold Hardiness, 13c Discrimination and Water Use Efficiency of Perennial Ryegrass Genotypes in Response to Wilt-Based Irrigation
title_full Cold Hardiness, 13c Discrimination and Water Use Efficiency of Perennial Ryegrass Genotypes in Response to Wilt-Based Irrigation
title_fullStr Cold Hardiness, 13c Discrimination and Water Use Efficiency of Perennial Ryegrass Genotypes in Response to Wilt-Based Irrigation
title_full_unstemmed Cold Hardiness, 13c Discrimination and Water Use Efficiency of Perennial Ryegrass Genotypes in Response to Wilt-Based Irrigation
title_sort cold hardiness, 13c discrimination and water use efficiency of perennial ryegrass genotypes in response to wilt-based irrigation
publisher ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst
publishDate 2010
url https://scholarworks.umass.edu/theses/427
https://scholarworks.umass.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1510&context=theses
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