Author:
Lawson A. R.,Kelly K. B.,Sale P. W. G.
Abstract
The effects of defoliation frequency (2 or 6 defoliations over a 91-day
period) on the reserve status and growth rate of 2 white clover cultivars,
cvv. Irrigation (medium-leafed) and Haifa (large-leafed), were examined over
the final 42 days of the defoliation treatments. The clover plants consisted
of single stolons growing in a sand/scoria mix in an unheated glasshouse,
and were fertilised weekly with a solution containing essential nutrients
excluding nitrogen.
More frequent defoliation reduced the leaf appearance rate, stolon elongation
rate, and plant size, and increased stolon death, with all of these effects
being less pronounced in Irrigation than in Haifa (18% v. 30%,
60% v. 80%, and 23% v 34%, respectively, for leaf
appearance rates, stolon elongation rates, and the proportion of stolon length
that died).
With infrequent defoliation, the combined utilisation of starch and
water-soluble carbohydrate (WSC) reserves in the first 14 days after
defoliation was equivalent to 15% of the plant weight at defoliation,
and to 95% of the new leaf produced during that period. Frequent
defoliation reduced the reserve content and remobilisation less in Irrigation
than in Haifa, with the combined mass of remobilised starch and WSC over the
first 14 days after defoliation being 2.9% and 2.0% of the plant
weight at defoliation, and 29% and 19% of leaf production over
that period, for Irrigation and Haifa, respectively.
The greater reserve mobilisation in Irrigation than in Haifa plants under
frequent defoliation probably contributed to their higher growth rates and
reduced stolon death. These cultivar differences with frequent defoliation
suggest that Irrigation is more suited to frequent defoliation than Haifa.
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Cited by
15 articles.
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