UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF
AGRICULTURE
AGRICULTURAL RESEARCH SERVICE
WASHINGTON D.C. 20250
AND
UTAH AGRICULTURAL EXPERIMENT STATION
UTAH STATE UNIVERSITY
LOGAN, UTAH 84322-4810
AND
UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF INTERIOR
BUREAU OF LAND MANAGEMENT
WASHINGTON D.C. 20240
AND
UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF
AGRICULTURE
NATURAL RESOURCES CONSERVATION
SERVICE
WASHINGTON D.C. 20013
NOTICE OF RELEASE OF TOE JAM CREEK
BOTTLEBRUSH SQUIRRELTAIL
SELECTED GERMPLASM
Toe Jam
Creek Germplasm of bottlebrush squirreltail (Elymus elymoides [Raf.] Swezey ssp. californicus) is proposed for release. This selected class (natural track) of
pre-cultivar germplasm is eligible for seed certification under guidelines
developed by the Association of Seed Certifying Agencies (2001). Participating in the release are the
USDA-ARS, the Utah Agricultural Experiment Station, the USDA-Natural Resources
Conservation Service and the USDI-Bureau of Land Management. This alternative release procedure is
being utilized because existing commercial sources of bottlebrush squirreltail
are inadequate, propagation material of specific ecotypes is needed for
ecosystem restoration, potential for immediate use is high, and commercial
potential beyond specific restoration and reclamation objectives is probably
limited (Young, 1995). The great
degree of genetic variation within and between E. elymoides subspecies for ecophysiological
traits (Jones et al., 2003) is probably related to the self-pollinating nature
of this grass (Jensen et al., 1990).
Toe Jam
Creek (PI 531604) keys to Sitanion hystrix (Nutt.) J.G. Smith var. californicus (= E. elymoides ssp. californicus), one of three bottlebrush
squirreltail taxa in
WilsonÕs (1963) treatment, while the Sand Hollow germplasm (Jones et al., 1998)
keys to Sitanion jubatum J.G. Smith (= Elymus multisetus [J.G. Smith] M.E. Jones), i.e., big
squirreltail (Barkworth et al., 1983; Barkworth, 1997). Recent molecular AFLP data have
verified that big squirreltail and bottlebrush squirreltail are indeed distinct
species (Larson et al., in prep.), though var. californicus was not included in that study.
Toe Jam
Creek was collected in northwestern Elko County, NV about 13 km west of
Tuscarora by J.
Garrison (USDA-SCS [NRCS]). D.R. Dewey
listed it in his collection as D-2986.
No intentional selection has been performed on this accession. The site is classified by USDA-NRCS
(Anonymous, 1981) as Major Land Resource Area D25 (Owyhee High Plateau). Elevation at the site is 1829 m. Average annual precipitation at
Tuscarora is 312 mm. Elevation is
1829 m. Toe Jam CreekÕs intended
area of use is the northern Great Basin and the lower Snake River Plain.
Removal of
the awn without seed damage has been difficult in Sand Hollow big squirreltail
germplasm. Mass of the proximal
centimeter of the awn for Toe Jam Creek was 0.266 mg at Evans Farm in 2001, 34%
lower than Sand Hollow. Awn mass
of Toe Jam Creek was not significantly different from Fish Creek germplasm at
North Park Farm in 2001. Toe Jam
Creek has been compared with 26 other E. elymoides and E. multisetus accessions from California, Nevada,
Oregon, Washington, Idaho, Montana, Wyoming, and Colorado in greenhouse and
field trials, none of which keyed to E. elymoides ssp. californicus (Jones et al., 2003). Heading date of Toe Jam Creek was
similar to the average of 17 E. elymoides ssp. elymoides accessions, but Toe Jam Creek had greater individual
seed mass than any of these accessions.
G-2 seed harvested from this field trial was used to establish a seed
increase at Evans Farm in the spring of 2000, from which G-3 seed was harvested
beginning in 2001. Seed of the G-3
generation will be maintained by the USDA-ARS Forage and Range Research
Laboratory, Logan, UT and will be made available to growers by the Utah Crop
Improvement Association. Seed
through the G-6 generation will be eligible for certification.
Seed of
Fish Creek germplasm will be donated to the National Plant Germplasm
System. Small quantities of seed
can be obtained for research purposes by contacting David Stout, Western
Regional Plant Introduction Station, Washington State University, Pullman, WA
99164‑6402. Appropriate
recognition should be made if this material contributes to the development of a
new breeding line or cultivar.
T.A. Jones,
D.C. Nielson, S.R. Larson, D.A. Johnson, T.A. Monaco, S.L. Caicco, D.G. Ogle,
S.A. Young, and J.R. Carlson.
REFERENCES
Anonymous. 1981. Land resource regions and major land resource areas of the
United States. USDA-SCS Agric.
Handb. 296. U.S. Gov. Print. Office,
Washington, DC.
Association
of Official Seed Certifying Agencies.
2001. Genetic and crop
standards of the Association of Official Seed Certifying Agencies. p. 1-12 to 1-14, 2-69 to 2-72. AOSCA, Boise, ID.
Barkworth,
M.E. 1997. Taxonomic and nomenclatural comments on
the Triticeae in North America.
Phytologia 83:302-311.
Barkworth,
M.E., D.R. Dewey, and R.J Atkins.
1983. New intergeneric
concepts in the Triticeae of the Intermountain Region: Key and comments. Great Basin Natur. 43:561-572.
Jensen,
K.B., Y.F. Zhang, and D.R. Dewey.
1990. Mode of pollination
of perennial species of the Triticeae in relation to genomically defined
genera. Can. J. Plant Sci.
70:215-225.
Jones,
T.A., D.C. Nielson, J.T. Arredondo, and M.G. Redinbaugh. 2003. Characterization of diversity among three squirreltail
taxa. J. Range Manage. (accepted)
Jones,
T.A., D.C. Nielson, D.G. Ogle, D.A. Johnson, and S.A. Young. 1998. Registration of Sand Hollow squirreltail germplasm. Crop Sci. 38:286.
Larson,
S.R., T.A. Jones, K.B. Jensen, and C.L. McCracken. Patterns of amplified fragment length polymorphism in Elymus section Sitanion reflect provenance, morphological
variation, and phylogeny. (to be
submitted to Can. J. Bot.)
Wilson,
F.D. 1963. Revision of Sitanion (Triticeae, Gramineae). Brittonia 15:303-323.
Young,
S.A. 1995. Verification of germplasm origin and
genetic status by seed certification agencies. p. 293-295. In B.A. Roundy et al. (compilers)
Proc. Wildland shrub and arid land restoration symposium. Intermountain Res. Stn. Gen. Tech. Rep.
INT-GTR-315. USDA-Forest Service,
Ogden, UT.
T.A. Jones,
D.C. Nielson, S.R. Larson, D.A. Johnson, and T.A. Monaco, USDA-ARS Forage and
Range Research, Utah State Univ., Logan, UT 84322-6300; S.L. Caicco, USDI-BLM,
WO‑230,1620 L St., room 204, Washington, DC 20036; D.G. Ogle, USDA-NRCS,
9173 West Barnes Dr., Suite C, Boise, ID 83709; S.A. Young, Utah Crop
Improvement Association, Utah State Univ., Logan, UT 84322-4820, and J.R.
Carlson, USDA-NRCS, 2150 Centre Avenue, Building A, Fort Collins, CO
80526-1891.
Director,
Utah Agricultural Experiment Station
Date
Utah State
University
Assistant
Director, Renewable Resources and Planning
Date
Bureau of
Land Management
U.S.
Department of Interior
State Conservationist, Idaho Date
Natural
Resources Conservation Service
U.S.
Department of Agriculture
Director, Ecological Sciences
Division Date
Natural
Resources Conservation Service
U.S.
Department of Agriculture
Administrator,
Agricultural Research Service
Date
U.S.
Department of Agriculture