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Title: Plant density and maturity stage impacts on stem cell wall composition in high quality and non-lodging alfalfa

Author
item Lamb, Joann
item Riday, Heathcliffe
item Jung, Hans Joachim

Submitted to: North American Alfalfa Improvement Conference
Publication Type: Abstract Only
Publication Acceptance Date: 7/27/2010
Publication Date: 7/27/2010
Citation: Lamb, J.F., Riday, H., Jung, H.G. 2010. Plant density and maturity stage impacts on stem cell wall composition in high quality and non-lodging alfalfa [abstract]. 42nd North American Alfalfa Improvement Conference & 21st Trifolium Conference, July 27-30, 2010, Boise, Idaho. Available: http://www.naaic.org/Meetings/National/2010meeting/Lamb.pdf.

Interpretive Summary:

Technical Abstract: The concentration of stem cell wall constituents in alfalfa (Medicago sativa L.) can affect energy availability in livestock production systems and energy conversion efficiency when alfalfa is used to produce biofuels. Knowledge of the environmental variability of cell wall concentration and composition among different germplasms would be critical in a breeding program to improve the available energy in alfalfa stems for livestock production or conversion to bioenergy. We evaluated total stem cell wall concentration (g kg-1 dry matter), Klason lignin, cellulose (glucose), hemicellulose (xylose + mannose + fucose), and pectin (uronic acids + arabinose + galactose + rhamnose) (g kg-1 cell wall) in four germplasms (two high quality and two non-lodging populations) established at two plant densities (180 and 450 plants m2) at two locations (Arlington, WI, and Becker, MN) and harvested at two maturity stages, early bud (4 cuts per season) and full flower (3 cuts per season), for 2 years. Yield weighted annual averages for all stem cell wall traits were calculated and analyzed to identify the impacts of location, year, plant density, harvest maturity, and germplasm sources on stem cell wall composition. Stem cell wall composition traits responded differently at the two locations, therefore, results are presented separately for the MN and WI locations. Plant density had no effect on stem cell wall concentration or composition at either location. Total cell wall concentration and cellulose increased while pectin and hemicellulose decreased at the later maturity stage at both locations. Cell wall compositional changes between the two maturity stages differed between MN and WI. At MN the plants gained a greater proportion of cellulose compared to Klason lignin at the later maturity stage, while the opposite was true at WI. The high quality alfalfa populations tended to have greater pectin concentrations than the non-lodging populations. All other stem cell wall traits showed inconsistent responses among the germplasms at the locations.