I. Madakadze et al., PHENOLOGY AND TILLER CHARACTERISTICS OF BIG BLUESTEM AND SWITCHGRASS CULTIVARS IN A SHORT GROWING-SEASON AREA, Agronomy journal, 90(4), 1998, pp. 489-495
Warm-season grasses are increasingly being cultivated in North America
for summer forage and biomass production. The cooler temperatures and
shorter growing seasons typical of Canadian production areas, are maj
or limiting factors to warm-season grass production in these areas. Th
is research assessed the morphological development and relationship of
growing degree-days (GDD) to plant morphology and tiller characterist
ics in nine cultivars of switchgrass (Panicum virgatum L.; Blackwell,
Cave-in-Rock, Dakota, Forestburg, Pathfinder, Shelter, Sunburst, ND374
3, and New Jersey 50) and in 'Niagara' big bluestem (Andropogon gerard
ii Vitman). The study was conducted for three years on a St. Bernard s
andy clay loam (Typic Hapludalf) in southwestern Quebec. Stand cover,
plant morphology, tiller number, height, and diameter, and leaf number
per tiller were all assessed during the season. All entries persisted
through the three years of the study and showed increases in tiller n
umber (from an average of 565 to 683 m(-2)) from one year to the next.
Dakota, Cave-in-Rock, and Shelter switchgrass had the highest ground
cover ratings after three years (85, 85, and 84%, respectively). Dakot
a, ND3743, and Forestburg were early maturing; New Jersey 50 was the l
atest in maturity. Niagara big bluestem had the tallest tillers (183 c
m) and largest rates of increase in height (2.8 cm d(-1)), followed by
Cave-in-Rock (2.0 cm d(-1)) and Blackwell (1.9 cm d(-1)). The shortes
t tillers were recorded for Dakota (111 cm) and ND3743 (118 cm). Chang
es in leaf number per tiller with GDD were best described by quadratic
regression models (r(2) = 0.80-0.97). These models were stable over t
wo years. Cultivars varied in the number of GDD required for maximum n
umber of leaves per tiller, with later-maturing cultivars generally re
quiring greater GDD accumulation. These data indicate that warm-season
grasses can be gown successfully in eastern Canada.