Crop Science Journal of Natural Resources and Life Sciences Education
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Published in Crop Sci 11:609-614 (1971)
© 1971 Crop Science Society of America
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Selective Modification of Alfalfa toward Acclimatization in a Subarctic Area of Severe Winter Stress1

L. J. Klebesadel2

A-syn.B, a strain of variegated alfalfa (Medicago media Persoon) possessing exceptional adaptation to subarctic conditions, has been developed during the past two decades at the College Research Center in subarctic, interior Alaska (63.8° N. lat.). This strain was synthesized from persistent plants remaining after winters had eliminated the less hardy bulk of populations from numerous alfalfa cultivars in experimental field plantings.

A-syn.B displayed significantly better winter survival in the field than 33 other strains from Canada, northern Europe, and the conterminous USA. Etiolated growth in autumn, an estimate of stored reserves, was expressed in greater amount and over a longer period by A-syn.B than by ‘Rhizoma,’ ‘Rambler,’ or ‘Vernal,’ varieties that are considered extremely winter-hardy elsewhere. A-syn.B sustained less injury to artificial freeze stress than Vernal. This new strain is considered to represent selection for genotypes better adapted for reserve storage and coldhardiness development than midtemperate alfalfa varieties under the brief term of short photoperiods in the Subarctic prior to onset of winter.

Another Alaskan synthetic, A-syn.A, derived from artificial crosses of M. media X M. falcata backcrossed to M. falcata, was superior to A-syn.B in two of five tests and inferior to pure M. falcata in winter survival only in one test that was exposed to greatest winter stress. A-syn.B was superior in winter survival to varieties of alsike, red, and strawberry clovers (Trifolium spp.), birdsfoot trefoil (Lotus corniculatus L.), crownvetch (Coronilla varia L.), and sainfoin (Onobrychis viciaefolia Scop.), and less hardy than two native Alaskan legumes.

Key Words: Medicago spp. • Winter survival • Adaptation • Food reserves • Etiolated growth • Photoperiod • Cold hardiness


1 Cooperative investigations of Plant Science Research Division, Agricultural Research Service, US Department of Agriculture, and the University of Alaska Institute of Agricultural Sciences. Alaska Inst. of Agr. Sci. Journal Paper No. J-113.

2 Research Agronomist, Plant Science Research Division, ARS, USDA, Pahner, Alaska 99645.

Received for publication October 2, 1970.


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