2015
DOI: 10.2135/cssaspecpub30.c6
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Improving Warm-Season Forage Grasses Using Selection, Breeding, and Biotechnology

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Cited by 29 publications
(17 citation statements)
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References 91 publications
(97 reference statements)
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“…The challenge to increasing grassland diversity is identifying and acquiring the necessary diverse germplasm when establishing cultivated pasture, restoring degenerated rangeland, or re-establishing native grasslands. Although some progress has been made in domesticating native grasses in the southern Great Plains of North America in recent years (Vogel 2000;Smith and others 2010), providing equivalent legume diversity in seed mixes has been less successful. Commercially available, introduced, cool-season legumes typically fail to survive harsh summer weather, while available tropical legumes are not adapted to the cold winter conditions.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The challenge to increasing grassland diversity is identifying and acquiring the necessary diverse germplasm when establishing cultivated pasture, restoring degenerated rangeland, or re-establishing native grasslands. Although some progress has been made in domesticating native grasses in the southern Great Plains of North America in recent years (Vogel 2000;Smith and others 2010), providing equivalent legume diversity in seed mixes has been less successful. Commercially available, introduced, cool-season legumes typically fail to survive harsh summer weather, while available tropical legumes are not adapted to the cold winter conditions.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Kansas, and Oklahoma and by Plant Materials Centers of the USDA-Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) (Alderson and Sharp, 1994;Vogel, 2000;Boe et al, 2004;Mitchell and Vogel, 2004). Although cultivars from these programs have been effectively used in the Midwestern states, it was recognized that the germplasm base for these grasses needed to be expanded with additional germplasm collected from remnant prairies in the US Midwest.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It adapts well in moderately to excessively well drained, clay loam soils, but tends to dominate rich, sandy soils . The seedhead consists of two or three racemes arising from a common joint of the seedstalk, looking like a turkey"s foot (Vogel, 2000). Seed are relatively dark and hairy.…”
Section: Big Bluestemmentioning
confidence: 99%