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Morphoagronomic variation in natural populations of Trifolium riograndense (Burkart)

Several species of Trifolium are widely cultivated as forage for animals and green manure. This work aimed to characterize and estimate through morphological and agronomic traits the genetic diversity of natural populations of T. riograndense, an important forage legume from native pastures of the s...

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Published in:Scientia agricola 2010-12, Vol.67 (6), p.675-684, Article 675
Main Authors: Conterato, Ionara Fatima, Dall'Agnol, Miguel, Schifino-Wittmann, Maria Teresa, Montardo, Daniel Portela, Pontalti, Gabriel Colombo, Almeida, Danielle
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Several species of Trifolium are widely cultivated as forage for animals and green manure. This work aimed to characterize and estimate through morphological and agronomic traits the genetic diversity of natural populations of T. riograndense, an important forage legume from native pastures of the state of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil. Plant height and diameter, number of primary and secondary stolons, stolon length, number of nodes per primary stolon, internode length, primary stolon diameter, leaf area, petiole length and dry matter production were analyzed in 29 accessions. The first five attributes and dry matter production were evaluated twice. A broad phenotypic variability was observed for almost all characteristics. Positive correlations occurred between petiole length and leaf area (r = 0.68), petiole length and plant height in the first evaluation (0.63), stolon length and plant height (0.58), total dry matter and plant diameter (0.61), and total dry matter and plant height in the second evaluation (0.55). The two most divergent accessions were collected in the same physiographic region and the two less divergent ones in different regions. A dissimilarity dendrogram separated four groups. Accessions collected in a region where T. riograndense is abundant were found to belong to different groups outlining the great variability of this native forage legume. Dry matter production in the first cut was the characteristic that most contributed (20.80%) to accessions divergence followed by number of secondary stolons (12.30%), leaf area (11.07%), and number of nodes per primary stolon (10.93%). Várias espécies de Trifolium são extensivamente cultivadas como forragem ou adubo verde. Caracterizaram-se e estimaram-se, por meio de atributos morfológicos e agronômicos, a diversidade genética de populações naturais de T. riograndense, importante leguminosa forrageira nativa dos campos naturais do Rio Grande do Sul. Estatura e diâmetro das plantas, número de estolões primários e secundários, comprimento do estolão primário, número de nós por estolão, comprimento dos entrenós, diâmetro de estolão, área foliar, tamanho do pecíolo e produção de massa seca foram avaliados em 29 acessos. Os cinco primeiros atributos e a produção de massa seca foram avaliados duas vezes. Ampla variabilidade fenotípica foi observada para quase todas as características. Ocorreram correlações positivas entre tamanho do pecíolo e área foliar (r = 0,68), tamanho do pecíolo e estatura (0,63)
ISSN:0103-9016
1678-992X
1678-992X
0103-9016
DOI:10.1590/S0103-90162010000600009