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Crop Science Abstract - Plant Genetic Resources

Variation in the Vernalization Response of a Geographically Diverse Collection of Timothy Genotypes

 

This article in CS

  1. Vol. 51 No. 6, p. 2689-2697
     
    Received: Dec 3, 2010


    * Corresponding author(s): jepper.andersen@agrsci.dk
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doi:10.2135/cropsci2010.12.0677
  1. Alice Fiila,
  2. Louise Bach Jensena,
  3. Siri Fjellheimb,
  4. Thomas Lübberstedtc and
  5. Jeppe Reitan Andersen *a
  1. a Aarhus Univ., Faculty of Agricultural Sciences, Dep. of Genetics and Biotechnology, Forsøgsvej 1, DK-4200 Slagelse, Denmark
    b Norwegian Univ. of Life Sciences, Dep. of Plant and Environmental Sciences, PO Box 5003, 1431 Aas, Norway
    c Iowa State Univ., Dep. of Agronomy, 1204 Agronomy Hall, Ames, IA 50011

Abstract

Timothy (Phleum pratense L.) has earlier been characterized as a long-day plant, which neither requires vernalization to induce flowering nor shows a vernalization response. Variation in flowering time of timothy has thus been ascribed to differences in critical photoperiods. We studied vernalization response in a geographically diverse collection of timothy and found that vernalization accelerates heading in all 38 genotypes included in this study. In addition, considerable variation in vernalization response, ranging from 711 to >1400 growing degree days, was observed between genotypes, and a vernalization requirement to induce flowering was indicated for five genotypes of Nordic origin. While heading time, irrespective of vernalization treatment, was found to be correlated to geographic origin of genotypes, a strong vernalization response was identified in genotypes of different geographic origin. Genotypes of non-Nordic origin with a strong vernalization response were either di- or tetraploid, whereas respective Nordic genotypes were hexaploid. The ploidy level in relation to vernalization response is discussed. This study clearly demonstrates the presence of considerable genetic variation for vernalization response within timothy, and future studies will elucidate the underlying causative genetic variation.

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