Publications by authors named "Michael D Peel"

Alfalfa ( L.), one of the most extensively grown forage crops, is sensitive to saline soils. We measured the breeding efficiency for increased salt tolerance in alfalfa by comparing lines selected from BC79S, CS, and SII populations with their unselected parental means for forage mass and associated changes in stem length, leaf-to-stem ratio (LSR), number of nodes per stem, crude protein (CP) content, and neutral detergent fiber (NDF) content.

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  • Insufficient dry matter intake (DMI) limits dairy cattle growth and milk production, with a study exploring differences in DMI and feed efficiency among four dairy breed types (Jersey, Holstein, Holstein-Jersey crossbreds, and Montbéliarde-Swedish Red-Holstein crossbreds) grazing on different pasture types (grass monoculture vs. grass-legume mixture).
  • The study found that Holsteins had the highest DMI, followed by crossbreds and Jerseys, with heifers on mixed pastures consuming 22% more dry matter than those on monocultures, though monoculture grazing was more efficient for weight gain.
  • Overall, while Jerseys demonstrated the best feed efficiency, the rankings of Holsteins
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Dairy heifers developed in certified organic programs, especially those utilizing pasture-based management schemes, have lower rates of gain than heifers raised in nonorganic confinement production systems in temperate climates, such as in the Intermountain West region of the United States. This study investigates the effects that different forages in a rotational grazing system have on development of organically raised Jersey heifers. Over 3 years, 210 yearling Jersey heifers were randomly assigned to one of 9 treatments, including a conventional confinement control where animals were fed a total mixed ration or one of 8 pasture treatments: Cache Meadow bromegrass (Bromus riparius Rehmann), QuickDraw orchard grass (Dactylis glomerata L.

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Low dietary energy and decreased intake of herbage have been attributed to the reduced performance of grazing dairy cattle. We hypothesized that grasses with inherently greater energy would interact in a complementary way with condensed tannins (CT) in birdsfoot trefoil to increase herbage intake by grazing dairy heifers. Eight pasture treatments comprising high-sugar perennial ryegrass (Lolium perenne L.

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Many agricultural lands in the western United States consist of soil with high concentrations of salt, which is detrimental to alfalfa ( L.) growth and production, especially in the region where water resource is limited. Developing alfalfa varieties with salt tolerance is imperative for sustainable production under increasing soil salinity.

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A simple Weibull distribution based empirical model that predicts pollen-parent fecundity distributions based on polycross size alone has been developed in outbred forage legume species for incorporation into quantitative genetic theory. Random mating or panmixis is a fundamental assumption in quantitative genetic theory. Random mating is sometimes thought to occur in actual fact, although a large body of empirical work shows that this is often not the case in nature.

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  • Alfalfa is a key forage crop that struggles with soil salinity, and this research focuses on two improved half-sib families (HS-A and HS-B) that survived better under salt conditions (up to EC 18).
  • Both families showed enhanced growth traits under salt stress, with HS-B exhibiting 72% more leaves and 44% longer stems, while HS-A had 84% more leaves, linked to higher chlorophyll accumulation (208% for HS-B and 78% for HS-A).
  • HS-B maintained better ion ratios and didn't accumulate sodium in shoots like its original population, while HS-A had increased calcium levels, indicating different strategies for salt tolerance in these alfal
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Elymus L. is the largest and most complex genus in the Triticeae tribe of grasses with approximately 150 polyploid perennial species occurring worldwide. We report here the first genetic linkage map for Elymus.

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