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Crop Science 43:258-265 (2003)
© 2003 Crop Science Society of America

TURFGRASS SCIENCE

Summer Root Decline

Production and Mortality for Four Cultivars of Creeping Bentgrass

Bingru Huang* and Xiaozhong Liu

Dep. of Plant Sci. Rutgers Univ., New Brunswick, NJ 08901

* Corresponding author (huang{at}aesop.rutgers.edu)

A better understanding of the seasonal dynamics of root activity for creeping bentgrass [Agrostis palustris Huds. = A. stolonifera var. palustris (Huds.) Farw.] would be beneficial for developing effective breeding and management programs to maximum summer turf quality. The objectives of this study were to examine dynamics changes in root production and mortality for four creeping bentgrass cultivars that differ in summer shoot performance. The study was conducted on a USGA-specification putting green in Manhattan, KS, during 1997 and 1998. The cultivars evaluated were ‘L-93’, ‘Penncross’, ‘Providence’, and ‘Crenshaw’. Grasses were mowed daily at 4 mm and irrigated on alternate days. Root production and mortality were monitored using the minirhizotron technique. In both years, total root length and number were highest in August and then decreased in September for all four cultivars. From July to September, the length and number of newly produced roots decreased while those of dead roots increased. The ratio of dead roots to live roots in length and number increased in late summer for all cultivars. While the differences in total root length and number among cultivars were not consistent between 2 yr, Penncross consistently had more dead roots, fewer new roots, and higher root mortality compared with the other cultivars. The results indicate that summer root decline of creeping bentgrass resulted from both decreased new root production and increased root mortality, which could be associated with high soil temperatures during the summer. Variation in root production and mortality may contribute to the differences in shoot summer performance of the four cultivars.

Abbreviations: DRL, dead root length • DRN, dead root number • NRL, new root length • NRN, new root number • RD, maximum rooting depth • RML, root mortality ratio in length • RMN, root mortality ratio in number • TRL, total root length • TRN, total root number




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K. Su, D. J. Bremer, S. J. Keeley, and J. D. Fry
Effects of High Temperature and Drought on a Hybrid Bluegrass Compared with Kentucky Bluegrass and Tall Fescue
Crop Sci., September 1, 2007; 47(5): 2152 - 2161.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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