Lucerne (Medicago sativa L.) is the most common forage
species in the world. In Italy it is grown on
c. 1 million ha and is one of the most important crops for
restoring soil fertility and for low-input
agriculture. Landraces are still common (73% of the seed market) and 14
are registered in the
National Register of Varieties. However, by 2002, landraces will be removed
from the Register, seed
certification will terminate and seed marketing will be forbidden. The
collection, agronomic
evaluation and characterization of farmer-landraces, still widespread in
central Italy, were the
objectives of the present work, particularly of the most important
morphological and physiological
characters useful for their identification. From 1993 to 1995, 20
landraces were evaluated for dry
matter and seed yield in dense stands, and compared with Casalina, a
local landrace, Boreal, an
improved variety, and Italia Centrale, the registered landrace from central
Italy. From 1992 to 1994,
six landraces were evaluated as spaced plants and 48 morphophysiological
characters were recorded.
Several landraces, not differing from the local control, were
significantly more productive than
Boreal. Univariate analysis of variance indicated that although
differences were found in several
characters, they could not be used to distinguish between populations.
Discriminant analysis was
more powerful, and five landraces out of six were clearly distinguished,
with an average of correct
classification of individuals in the group of origin as high as 82%.
The ex situ and in situ conservation of lucerne landraces,
their potential role in future breeding
programmes, and the most important characters to be used in discriminant
analysis in the
landrace/variety characterization of allogamous species in
Hardy–Weinberg equilibrium are discussed.