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Published in Crop Sci 28:599-604 (1988)
© 1988 Crop Science Society of America
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Influences of Selection Method and Nitrogen Environment on Breeding Alfalfa for Increased Forage Yield and Quality

Larry R. Teuber* and Donald A. Phillips

Department of Agronomy and Range Science, Univ. of California, Davis, CA 95616

* Corresponding author.

Alfalfa (Medicago sativa L.) can use both mineral N and N2 when effective Rhizobium bacteria are present. Our group previously increased dry matter and N assimilation in unadapted alfalfa germplasm sources by using independent culling levels to choose individual plants with high forage dry weight and N concentration when grown sequentially under N2- and NH4NO3-dependent conditions. The objectives of the present study were (i) to assess the potential of other selection methods for improving forage yield and protein content, (ii) to evaluate the need for screening under both N2- and NH4NO3-dependent conditions, and (iii) to test whether the original breeding protocol could be .applied successfully to agronomically adapted germplasm. First, data from ‘Moapa 69’ plants grown sequentially under N2- and NH4NO3-dependent conditions were used for simulated selection of single and multiple traits in each N environment. Results predict that single trait selection will produce undesirable changes in the unselected trait and that independent culling levels will increase forage dry weight and N concentration in both N environments. The greatest progress was made with a base index selection system, but this system required an excessive number of N determinations. Second, small populations were developed from Moapa 69 using independent culling levels to select for high forage dry weight and increased forage N concentration in plants grown under N2, NH4NO3, or a sequence of N2- and NH4NO3-dependent conditions. After two cycles of phenotypic recurrent selection, the resulting germplasm pools were evaluated for growth on both N2 and NH4NO3. Sequential selection on N2 and NH4NO3 increased forage dry weight more than 24% on both N sources (P < 0.10); selection only on NH4NO3 increased forage dry weight significantly (P ≤ 0.10) only under NH4NO3-dependent conditions; but selection only on N2 did not improve forage dry weight in either N environment significantly (P ≤ 0.10). Forage N concentration was not increased by selection in either N environment. Finally, large populations from Moapa 69 grown sequentially on N2 and NH4NO3 were synthesized through three cycles of phenotypic recurrent selection using independent culling levels for high forage dry weight and greater N concentration. The third cycle population produced 54% more forage dry weight (P < 0.001) with 9% higher forage concentration (P < 0.001) and 67% more total crude protein (P < 0.001) than the original Moapa 69 in results averaged across both N environments in the glasshouse. The conclusion from these studies is that selection for dry weight and N concentration must be done on both N2 and NH4NO3 dependent environments to develop alfalfa with increased forage yield and higher crude protein concentration in both N environments under glasshouse conditions.

Key Words: Lucerne • Medicago sativa L. • Base index • Multiple trait selection • Forage quality • Independent culling levels


Supported in part by National Science Foundation grant PCM 83-17187 and the California Crop Improvement Assoc.

Received for publication September 14, 1987.


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J. F. S. Lamb, M. P. Russelle, and D. M. Fenton
Field-based Selection Method Creates Alfalfa Populations That Differ in Nitrate Nitrogen Uptake
Crop Sci., March 19, 2008; 48(2): 450 - 457.
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C.E.L. Fonseca, D.R. Viands, J.L. Hansen, and A.N. Pell
Associations among Forage Quality Traits, Vigor, and Disease Resistance in Alfalfa
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