USPP18247P3 - Bermudagrass plant named ‘Premier’ - Google Patents

Bermudagrass plant named ‘Premier’ Download PDF

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Publication number
USPP18247P3
USPP18247P3 US10/768,091 US76809104V USPP18247P3 US PP18247 P3 USPP18247 P3 US PP18247P3 US 76809104 V US76809104 V US 76809104V US PP18247 P3 USPP18247 P3 US PP18247P3
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premier
leaf
bermudagrass
tifgreen
length
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US10/768,091
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US20050172377P1 (en
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Donald La Verne Parsons
Virginia Gail Lehman
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Turfgrass Development Inc
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Donald La Verne Parsons
Virginia Gail Lehman
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Assigned to TURFGRASS DEVELOPMENT, INC. reassignment TURFGRASS DEVELOPMENT, INC. ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST (SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS). Assignors: GAIL, VIRGINIA, PARSONS, DONALD LA VERNE
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    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A01AGRICULTURE; FORESTRY; ANIMAL HUSBANDRY; HUNTING; TRAPPING; FISHING
    • A01HNEW PLANTS OR NON-TRANSGENIC PROCESSES FOR OBTAINING THEM; PLANT REPRODUCTION BY TISSUE CULTURE TECHNIQUES
    • A01H5/00Angiosperms, i.e. flowering plants, characterised by their plant parts; Angiosperms characterised otherwise than by their botanic taxonomy
    • A01H5/12Leaves
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A01AGRICULTURE; FORESTRY; ANIMAL HUSBANDRY; HUNTING; TRAPPING; FISHING
    • A01HNEW PLANTS OR NON-TRANSGENIC PROCESSES FOR OBTAINING THEM; PLANT REPRODUCTION BY TISSUE CULTURE TECHNIQUES
    • A01H6/00Angiosperms, i.e. flowering plants, characterised by their botanic taxonomy
    • A01H6/46Gramineae or Poaceae, e.g. ryegrass, rice, wheat or maize
    • A01H6/4612Cynodon [Bermudagrass]

Definitions

  • the present invention relates to the genus and species Cynodon dacytlon (L.) Pers.
  • the present invention relates to a new and distinct asexually reproduced variety of perennial bermudagrass Cynodon dacytlon (L.) Pers.
  • This invention relates to a new and distinct perennial bermudagrass cultivar identified as ‘Premier’ bermudagrass (herein referred to as ‘Premier’).
  • the inventors Donald Parsons and Virginia Lehman, discovered ‘Premier’ under cultivated conditions in a golf course fairway near Seal Beach, Calif.
  • ‘Premier’ was identified as a distinctly different vegetative patch or segregated clonal plant differing by darker green leaf color from the suspected parental variety common Tifgreen (unpatented).
  • the inventors asexually reproduced ‘Premier’ by taking vegetative cuttings of the plant material from the golf course including stolons and rhizomes, cutting the rhizomes and stolons into segments, each with a vegetative bud, and rooted them in potting media in a greenhouse near Parker, Tex.
  • FIG. 1 Tiller of ‘Premier’ bermudagrass.
  • ‘Premier’ was characterized in greenhouse and field conditions. ‘Premier’ is a unique variety of bermudagrass ( Cynodon dacytlon (L.) Pers). that was discovered under cultivated conditions in a gold course fairway near Seal Beach, Calif. ‘Premier’ was identified in the field as having a darker green leaf color than its suspected parent ‘Tifgreen’. The golf course fairway was located in USDA Plant Hardiness Zone 9. ‘Premier’ was propagated by the inventors under field and greenhouse conditions in Parker, Tex. by cutting of rhizomes and stolons, rooting them in soil, and planting of the rooted material to provide planting stock for studying performance and for comparison of morphological characters after propagation.
  • ‘Premier’ has been propagated by rhizomes, stolons, tillers, and sod. Asexually reproduced plants of ‘Premier’ have remained stable and true to type through successive generations of propagation. No seedling establishment from ‘Premier’ has been noticed in either greenhouse or field studies.
  • ‘Premier’ is a perennial bermudagrass that spreads by both stolons and rhizomes. Characteristics of ‘Premier’ measured in 2003 were taken from plants that were approximately 9 months in age. The greenhouse was located near Lebanon, Oreg., with a nighttime low temperature of 50 degrees F., and daytime high of 80 degrees F., and a minimum soil temperature of 60 degrees F. The plants were grown with a minimum 14-hour day length, supplemented with photosynthetically active radiation equivalent to approximately 50% sunlight. The plants were fertilized with the equivalent of 1 pound of actual N per month, using a soluble fertilizer of 20-20-20 in two equal soluble applications per month.
  • ‘Premier’ has a finer leaf texture than the suspected parent ‘Tifgreen’ (Table 1) when measured under greenhouse conditions in Lebanon, Oreg. ‘Premier’ has few surface leaf (1-5) hairs compared to the variety Tifgreen which has no leaf hairs. The hairs at the mouth of the sheath of ‘Premier’ are longer than ‘Tifway’ and ‘Tifgreen’ (Table 3). No seeds of ‘Premier’ have developed; no seedlings have been noted in the field studies. The inflorescences produced in the greenhouse have consisted of empty florets and no seed has been formed.
  • ‘Premier’ has not shown any susceptibility in tests to date in the Aubrey, Tex. test production site to the diseases and insects common to the bermudagrass genus. ‘Premier’ has shown good turfgrass performance and temperature adaptation when tested in Dallas, Tex. (Table 4), and as far north as Aubrey, Tex. USDA zone 8A, which would extend the area of adaptation for ‘Premier’ in a line from South-Central Alabama across central Arkansas through North Central Texas, across New Mexico and Arizona to Los Angeles in an East/West line and on a North/South line from North central Texas south through Mexico. ‘Premier’ will be limited only by winter survival in colder regions, and is undergoing further research to determine the most northern area of survival at this time.
  • ‘Premier’ is similar to most medium to fine textured bermudagrasses in water use demands as shown in production situations, and will be limited by adequate precipitation in drier to arid regions. ‘Premier’ is adapted from sandy to heavier loam soil textures and from slightly acid to slightly alkaline soil pH.

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  • Life Sciences & Earth Sciences (AREA)
  • Health & Medical Sciences (AREA)
  • Physiology (AREA)
  • Botany (AREA)
  • Developmental Biology & Embryology (AREA)
  • Environmental Sciences (AREA)
  • Natural Medicines & Medicinal Plants (AREA)
  • Cultivation Of Plants (AREA)
  • Breeding Of Plants And Reproduction By Means Of Culturing (AREA)
  • Peptides Or Proteins (AREA)

Abstract

An asexually reproduced variety of perennial bermudagrass with a unique combination of characters including fine blade width and medium internode length.

Description

Latin name of the genus and species of the plant claimed: The present invention relates to the genus and species Cynodon dacytlon (L.) Pers.
Variety denomination: ‘Premier’.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION Field of Invention
The present invention relates to a new and distinct asexually reproduced variety of perennial bermudagrass Cynodon dacytlon (L.) Pers.
BRIEF SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
This invention relates to a new and distinct perennial bermudagrass cultivar identified as ‘Premier’ bermudagrass (herein referred to as ‘Premier’). The inventors, Donald Parsons and Virginia Lehman, discovered ‘Premier’ under cultivated conditions in a golf course fairway near Seal Beach, Calif. ‘Premier’ was identified as a distinctly different vegetative patch or segregated clonal plant differing by darker green leaf color from the suspected parental variety common Tifgreen (unpatented). The inventors asexually reproduced ‘Premier’ by taking vegetative cuttings of the plant material from the golf course including stolons and rhizomes, cutting the rhizomes and stolons into segments, each with a vegetative bud, and rooted them in potting media in a greenhouse near Parker, Tex.
For purposes of registration under the “International Convention for the Protection of New Varieties of Plants” (generally known by its French acronym as the UPOV Convention) and noting Section 1612 of the Manual of Plant Examining Procedure, it is proposed that the title of the invention is Bermudagrass plant named ‘Premier’.
BRIEF DESCRIPTIONS OF THE ILLUSTRATIONS
FIG. 1. Tiller of ‘Premier’ bermudagrass.
COMPLETE DESCRIPTION OF THE VARIETY
‘Premier’ was characterized in greenhouse and field conditions. ‘Premier’ is a unique variety of bermudagrass (Cynodon dacytlon (L.) Pers). that was discovered under cultivated conditions in a gold course fairway near Seal Beach, Calif. ‘Premier’ was identified in the field as having a darker green leaf color than its suspected parent ‘Tifgreen’. The golf course fairway was located in USDA Plant Hardiness Zone 9. ‘Premier’ was propagated by the inventors under field and greenhouse conditions in Parker, Tex. by cutting of rhizomes and stolons, rooting them in soil, and planting of the rooted material to provide planting stock for studying performance and for comparison of morphological characters after propagation. ‘Premier’ has been propagated by rhizomes, stolons, tillers, and sod. Asexually reproduced plants of ‘Premier’ have remained stable and true to type through successive generations of propagation. No seedling establishment from ‘Premier’ has been noticed in either greenhouse or field studies.
‘Premier’ is a perennial bermudagrass that spreads by both stolons and rhizomes. Characteristics of ‘Premier’ measured in 2003 were taken from plants that were approximately 9 months in age. The greenhouse was located near Lebanon, Oreg., with a nighttime low temperature of 50 degrees F., and daytime high of 80 degrees F., and a minimum soil temperature of 60 degrees F. The plants were grown with a minimum 14-hour day length, supplemented with photosynthetically active radiation equivalent to approximately 50% sunlight. The plants were fertilized with the equivalent of 1 pound of actual N per month, using a soluble fertilizer of 20-20-20 in two equal soluble applications per month.
‘Premier’ has a finer leaf texture than the suspected parent ‘Tifgreen’ (Table 1) when measured under greenhouse conditions in Lebanon, Oreg. ‘Premier’ has few surface leaf (1-5) hairs compared to the variety Tifgreen which has no leaf hairs. The hairs at the mouth of the sheath of ‘Premier’ are longer than ‘Tifway’ and ‘Tifgreen’ (Table 3). No seeds of ‘Premier’ have developed; no seedlings have been noted in the field studies. The inflorescences produced in the greenhouse have consisted of empty florets and no seed has been formed.
‘Premier’ has not shown any susceptibility in tests to date in the Aubrey, Tex. test production site to the diseases and insects common to the bermudagrass genus. ‘Premier’ has shown good turfgrass performance and temperature adaptation when tested in Dallas, Tex. (Table 4), and as far north as Aubrey, Tex. USDA zone 8A, which would extend the area of adaptation for ‘Premier’ in a line from South-Central Alabama across central Arkansas through North Central Texas, across New Mexico and Arizona to Los Angeles in an East/West line and on a North/South line from North central Texas south through Mexico. ‘Premier’ will be limited only by winter survival in colder regions, and is undergoing further research to determine the most northern area of survival at this time. ‘Premier’ is similar to most medium to fine textured bermudagrasses in water use demands as shown in production situations, and will be limited by adequate precipitation in drier to arid regions. ‘Premier’ is adapted from sandy to heavier loam soil textures and from slightly acid to slightly alkaline soil pH.
TABLE 1
Leaf blade widths and lengths and texture class of selected bermudagrass
cultivars, measured under greenhouse conditions in Lebanon, OR, 2003.
Width, Length,
2nd 2nd
youngest youngest
stolon stolon Length, 3rd Width, 3rd Leaf
leaf leaf panicle leaf panicle leaf Texture
Variety mm cm cm mm Class
OR2002 2.15 2.24 2.29 1.58 Medium
Tifgreen 2.77 2.79 2.01 2.11 Medium
Tifway 2.37 3.01 2.22 1.77 Medium
TABLE 2
Inflorescence and leaf characters of selected bermudagrass cultivars,
measured under greenhouse conditions in Lebanon, OR 2003.
Leaf
Sheath
Number Flag Flag Length, Leaf Sheath Length,
panicle leaf leaf Flag 4th Youngest
branches width length Leaf Vegetative
Variety cm mm cm mm Leaf mm
‘Premier’ 3.50 0.89 0.61 2.9 1.9
‘Tifgreen’ 3.38 1.26 0.84 3.1 1.8
‘Tifway’ 3.00 0.91 0.65 3.3 2.4
TABLE 3
Sheath hair length and stolon internode length measurements of selected
bermudagrass cultivars, measured under greenhouse conditions in
Lebanon, OR, 2003
Hair length, Stolon Internode Stolon Internode
mouth of sheath length, node 2-3 length, node 3-4
Variety mm cm cm
‘Premier’ 2.35 4.63 5.19
‘Tifgreen’ 2.06 3.77 3.60
‘Tifway’ 2.12 5.73 5.33
TABLE 4
Turf quality characters, Dallas, TX, 2003.
Genetic Spring Leaf Quality
Color Greenup texture May Variety
7.33 5.67 7.67 6.33 Premier
7.57 6.00 8.00 5.67 Tifway
7.33 5.87 7.00 6.67 Celebration
7.00 5.00 6.33 6.00 Tift No. 1
6.57 4.00 6.00 4.00 Az. Common
6.67 3.33 6.00 5.00 NM Sahara
7.00 6.00 7.33 6.33 Midlawn
7.67 5.33 7.67 6.00 Tifsport
7.67 5.67 6.33 5.00 MS-Choice
0.75 1.00 0.70 1.30 LBD
Quality Quality Quality Mean
June July August Quality Variety
6.33 7.00 7.00 5.47 Premier
5.67 7.00 6.33 5.17 Tifway
5.67 6.67 6.00 5.03 Celebration
5.67 6.00 5.57 5.19 Tift No. 1
4.67 5.00 5.00 4.14 Az. Common
5.00 6.00 5.33 4.53 NM Sahara
6.33 6.67 7.00 5.36 Midlawn
6.33 7.00 7.00 5.08 Tifsport
6.33 6.33 6.33 4.64 MS-Choice
0.77 0.66 0.71 LBD
Spring Summer Fall Dec.
Density Density Density Color Variety
5.00 8.00 7.67 2.67 Premier
5.00 7.67 8.00 5.00 Tifway
5.33 8.00 7.33 3.00 Celebration
5.33 7.67 7.33 3.33 Tift No. 1
3.67 7.00 7.00 2.00 Az. Common
4.67 7.00 7.00 1.33 NM Sahara
6.00 7.67 8.00 3.67 Midlawn
4.00 8.00 7.67 5.00 Tifsport
4.33 7.67 7.33 3.00 MS-Choice
1.79 0.53 1.21 1.00 LBD
COMPLETE BOTANICAL DESCRIPTION OF THE VARIETY
  • Origin: ‘Premier’ is a cultivar of a single clone of bermudagrass discovered under cultivated conditions in a Seal Beach, Calif. golf course fairway of ‘Tifgreen’ bermudagrass.
  • Classification: Cynodon dacytlon (L.) Pers.
  • Growth habit: ‘Premier’ is a perennial plant hat spreads by stolons and rhizomes and produces a dense, fine textured turfgrass. The inflorescence of ‘Premier’ is a panicle, with branches originating from a common center.
  • Leaf blade: fold in the bud, slightly concave surface versus Tifgreen and Tifway, both of which have flat leaves.
  • Leaf blade pubescence: Adaxial leaf surface have very few, short (1-5) hairs versus Tifway with many hairs on adaxial surface; hairs mostly absent on abaxial leaf surface.
  • Leaf sheath pubescence: present with very short hairs versus Tifgreen with no pubescence.
  • Leaf blade margin: rough versus Tifgreen with slightly rough margin.
  • Leaf blade veins: obscure.
  • Leaf ligule hairs; present, very short.
  • Leaf blade flexibility (softness): Stiff versus Tifgreen: soft; Tifway; medium stiffness.
  • Vegetative leaf, fourth youngest vegetative leaf:
      • Blade length mean.—2.46 cm
      • Blade width mean.—2.15 mm
      • Sheath length mean.—1.9 cm.
  • Stolon internode length, node 2-3: 4.63 cm.
  • Stolon internode length, node 3-4: 5.19 cm.
  • Stolon internode width, node 2-3: 0.89×1.02 mm.
  • Stolon internode width, node 3-4: 0.99×1.07 mm.
  • Inflorescence characters:
      • Length of flowering stem from lower node to panicle center.—7.74; Tifgreen: 14.14 cm.
      • Internode length from flag leaf to 2nd internode below flag.—4.73 cm.
      • Culm width, stem thickness, base of floral area.—0.47 mm; Tifway: 0.54 mm.
      • Node thickness, node below flag leaf.—0.65 mm.
  • Mature plant height, including inflorescence: 10.8; Tifgreen: 15.23 cm.
  • Color Notations, vegetative characters, based on The R.H.S. Colour Chart (light quality, photoperiod, and general growth of the plants affect color notations):
      • Leaf blade color adaxial leaf surface.—137B green.
      • Stolon color.—59A red purple and 145B yellow green.
  • Color Notations, floral characters, based on The R.H.S. Colour Chart (light quality, photoperiod, and general growth of the plants affect color notations):
      • Stigma color.—61A red-purple.
      • Anther color.—5C yellow.
  • Turf quality (rated 1-9, 9 best): 8; ‘Tifgreen’: 7.
  • Turf color (rated 1-9, 9 best): 7; ‘Tifgreen’: 6.

Claims (1)

1. A new and distinct variety of bermudagrass plant, substantially as described and illustrated herein.
US10/768,091 2004-02-02 2004-02-02 Bermudagrass plant named ‘Premier’ Active 2025-09-23 USPP18247P3 (en)

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Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
USPP31695P3 (en) * 2018-05-25 2020-04-21 The Board Of Regents For Oklahoma State University Bermudagrass plant named ‘OKC 1131’
USPP35548P2 (en) 2022-11-29 2023-12-12 The Board of Regents for the Oklahoma Agricultural and Mechanical Colleges Bermudagrass cultivar ‘OKC1876’

Non-Patent Citations (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Title
MPEP 609 [R-5] p. 1-4 (MPEP=Manual of Patent Examining Practice) USPTO. *

Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
USPP31695P3 (en) * 2018-05-25 2020-04-21 The Board Of Regents For Oklahoma State University Bermudagrass plant named ‘OKC 1131’
USPP35548P2 (en) 2022-11-29 2023-12-12 The Board of Regents for the Oklahoma Agricultural and Mechanical Colleges Bermudagrass cultivar ‘OKC1876’

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Free format text: ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST;ASSIGNORS:PARSONS, DONALD LA VERNE;GAIL, VIRGINIA;SIGNING DATES FROM 20201008 TO 20201013;REEL/FRAME:054121/0254