PERFORMANCE OF SUBTERRANEAN AND WHITE CLOVER VARIETIES IN DRY HILL COUNTRY

Authors

  • D.F. Chapman
  • G.W. Sheath
  • M.J. Macfarlane
  • P.J. Rumball
  • B.M.Cooper G. Crouchley
  • J.H. Hoglund
  • K.H. Widdup

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.33584/jnzg.1986.47.1764

Abstract

Nine subterranean clover cultivars and 10 white clover varieties, differing in characters such as morphology and flowering date (sub clover), or growth habit and seeding ability (white clover), where evaluated for persistence and production at 8 summer-dry hill country sites. Results for the first 3-4 years suggest the sub clovers on the New Zealand Acceptable Herbage Cultivars List (Mt Barker, Tallarook, Woogenellup, Glare) should be revised. Regeneration of Woogenellup and Glare was consistently poor, while Tallarook performed well at most sites. The current unavailability of Tallarook seed means Mt Barker is the only effechve option for grasslands in most of New Zealand. Cultivars of the sub clover subspecies yanmnicum (Larisa, Trikkala) showed promise for winter~wet, summer dry environments, as did Nangeela in winter-cold environments. A late-flowering, prostrate, low oestrogenic sub clover similar to Tallarook would be well suited to large areas of summer-dry hill country. There is a clear need for a white clover cultivar adapted to summer-dry hill country as none of the varieties tested survived severe moisture stress at 2 sites (Hawke's Bay, North Canterbury), and none performed consistently well at the other sites. New Zealand vaneties (Hula, Pitau, G18 and a hill country selection) showed best persistence and production. The overseas cultivars Haifa, Tamar, Louisiana and Clarence Valley, which are all adapted to dry conditions in their country of origin, were consistently poor. Firm selection criteria for dry hill country were not identified, though stolen density and seeding ability should be incorporated and the strong influence of management and soil fertility on genotype performance must be recognised. Keywords: subterranean clover (Trifolium subterraneum L.), white clover (Trifolium repens L.), hill country, dryland, cultivars, persistence, genotype-environmental interaction.

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Published

1986-01-01

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