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Agronomic and morphological characterizations and genetic divergence on white clover germplasm

This work aimed to evaluate morphological features of the white clover core collection obtained from the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA), represented by 78 accessions, in order to characterize the existent morphological variability and to estimate the genetic divergence, using nine characters (eight morphological and one agronomic). Seventeen plants from each access were evaluated individually at the Experimental Station of the Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul in Eldorado do Sul and characterized in relation to the following characters: plant height, growth habit, flowering intensity, stolon length, node number per stolon, internode length, stolon diameter, total dry matter yield and leaf area per plant. Using the estimate of Mahalanobis' distance, the results showed that the accessions 1 (PI 195534) and 10 (PI 419325) presented the greatest distance (45.4), while the accessions 58 (PI 180491) and 68 (PI 197830) presented the smallest distance (0.19). The leaf area was the character with the largest individual relative contribution to the genetic divergence (24%), followed by plant height (20%), flowering intensity (19%) and total dry matter yield (15%). There was a positive and highly significant correlation between plant height and leaf area (0.92) and also between stolon length and internode length (0.90).

morphology; plant breeding; variability; winter forage


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