AI Article Synopsis

  • Root carbohydrate accumulation after defoliation greatly influences the phenolic content and feed quality of Lotus corniculatus, more so than environmental regrowth conditions.
  • Variability in condensed tannin levels in regrowth poses challenges for using this legume in agriculture and impacts the nutrition of herbivores—high or low tannin levels can either help or hinder animal diets.
  • Factors such as temperature and carbon allocation during the growth process can lead to significant differences in tannin and flavonol levels, affecting tissue digestibility and overall forage quality across seasons.

Article Abstract

Differential accumulation of root carbohydrates at defoliation have a higher impact than regrowth environmental conditions on the phenolic content and feed quality of the perennial forage legume Lotus corniculatus. The unpredictable nature of proanthocyanidin (condensed tannin) accumulation in regrowth vegetation of the perennial forage legume Lotus corniculatus represents a dilemma to the wider use of this species in agriculture, and a potential problem in the nutritional ecology of some terrestrial herbivores, as variable condensed tannin levels can result in either beneficial or detrimental effects on animal nutrition. However, the source of this variation has not been extensively explored. High levels of carbon allocation to roots during low-temperature preconditioning of clonal plants were found to significantly increase condensed tannin and flavonol levels in regrowth foliage, while low levels of carbon allocation to roots during periods of high-temperature preconditioning significantly decreased condensed tannin and flavonol levels. Phenolic accumulation and tissue digestibility were also differentially affected by regrowth of these defoliated plants at high CO concentrations and by drought. Lower rates of digestion generally paralleled increases in tannin levels in regrowth leaves under the different environmental conditions, with rates of digestion falling in high tannin plants, despite correspondingly higher levels of leaf carbohydrates. Differential accumulation of root carbohydrates between seasons and years may therefore explain some of the variability found in the nutritional quality of the forage of this species.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00425-020-03523-xDOI Listing

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