Registration of 'RoadCrest' Crested Wheatgrass

K. H. Asay, K. B. Jensen, W. H. Horton, D. A. Johnson, N. J. Chatterton, and S. A. Young

'RoadCrest crested wheatgrass (Reg. no. _________), a rhizomatous cultivar of crested wheatgrass (Agropyron cristatum (L.) Gaertn.), was developed by a research team at the USDA-ARS Forage and Range Research Laboratory, Utah State University, Logan, UT, and was released on 2 June 1998 in cooperation with the Utah Agricultural Experiment Station. RoadCrest was evaluated as CWG-Rhizome.

RoadCrest was derived from two accessions originally collected at Dikmen Ankara and GŸvercinlik Ankara, Turkey and provided to the USDA-ARS Forage and Range Research Unit by Dr. Esvet Acikgoz. Rhizomatous plants, observed in these accessions during their initial evaluation on a semiarid range site in central Utah, were selected and established in a crossing block to develop the parental germplasm. These plant materials were then subjected to two cycles of selection based largely on progeny evaluation for increased rhizome development, fine leaf texture, short growth stature, and improved seedling vigor. Breeder seed was compounded from selected polycross seedlots in the final breeding cycle.

It is a long-lived perennial, and is significantly more rhizomatous than any other crested wheatgrass included in evaluation trials, including the cultivar Ephraim, which is the only other rhizomatous cultivar of crested wheatgrass to be released. RoadCrest produces less biomass and is from 15 to 25% shorter in stature than forage-type crested wheatgrass cultivars. The cultivar has been evaluated on roadsides and in turf trials in Utah, Colorado, and Washington. Seedling vigor and drought resistance of RoadCrest compares favorably with other crested wheatgrasses, including 'Hycrest', 'CD-II', 'Fairway', and 'Nordan'. RoadCrest is significantly easier to establish and initiates growth earlier in the spring than other turf and low-maintenance turf grasses including Kentucky bluegrass (Poa pratensis), 'Sodar' thickspike wheatgrass (Elymus lanceolatus), tall fescue (Festuca arundinacea), and hard fescue (Festuca ovina). Leaf color intensity and turf quality of RoadCrest are not as good as Kentucky bluegrass, tall fescue, and perennial ryegrass when the latter grasses are grown under optimum conditions. RoadCrest greens up early in the spring and remains green until mid summer on temperate sites similar to Logan, Utah. Plants then go dormant until temperatures decline in the fall. This characteristic varies according to summer temperatures and annual precipitation. Summer dormancy is much less prominent at elevations above 1,500 m.

RoadCrest is recommended for use along roadsides or similar low-maintenance turf applications in temperate, semiarid regions receiving from 250 to 500 mm of annual precipitation. Seeding rates should be from 17 to 28 kg ha-1, which is substantially less than those recommended for other turf grasses such as Kentucky bluegrass, ryegrass, or tall fescue. When seeded at more than the recommended rate, particularly at high moisture levels, seedling diseases are likely to occur resulting in substantial thinning of the stand. However, the remaining seedlings of RoadCrest readily establish, and excellent stands are usually obtained. As with other crested wheatgrass cultivars, supplemental irrigation can actually be a detriment if total water application (precipitation + irrigation) exceeds 550 mm annually.

RoadCrest is a natural tetraploid (2n=4x=28) and is fully interfertile with tetraploid cultivars of crested wheatgrass (Agropyron cristatum and A. desertorum), Siberian crested wheatgrass (A. fragile), and the crested wheatgrass hybrid cultivars Hycrest and CD-II. Established isolation distances from these cultivars must be maintained in Certified seed fields. The cultivar produced 560 kg of seed ha-1 when grown in rows 0.9 m apart with moderate supplemental irrigation and 50 kg N ha-1 applied in the fall. At 100% percent purity, there are approximately 530,000 seeds kg-1.

Breeder, Foundation, and Certified seed classes will be recognized. Breeder seed will be maintained by the USDA-ARS Forage and Range Research Laboratory at Logan, UT. Foundation seed will be produced by the USDA-ARS at Logan and distributed by the Utah Crop Improvement Association. Rights for production and marketing of Certified seed will be awarded on a bid basis. Protection will be applied for under the Plant Variety Protection Act of 1994. Conditions of this license specify that seed of the cultivar RoadCrest can be marketed only as a class of Certified seed. Genetic material of this release will be deposited in the National Plant Germplasm System where it will be available for research purposes, including development and commercialization of new cultivars.

References

  1. K. H. Asay, K. B. Jensen, W. H. Horton, D. A. Johnson, and N. J. Chatterton, USDA-ARS Forage and Range Research Laboratory, Utah State Univ., Logan, UT 84322-6300; and S. A. Young, Plants, Soils, and Biometeorology Dep., Utah State Univ., Logan, UT 84322-4820. Cooperative investigations of USDA-Agricultural Research Service and the Utah Agricultural Experiment Station, Logan, UT 84322-4820. Approved as Journal Paper No. 7081. Registration by CSSA. Accepted _______.