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Plant sciences, sustainable farming systems and food quality

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This article has been peer reviewed and accepted for publication. It is in production and has not been edited, so may differ from the final published form.

Lucerne genetic diversity for living mulch: Identifying key traits and evaluating their impacts on wheat development

Zineb EL GHAZZAL 0009-0000-5066-3126, Gaëtan LOUARN, Fabien SURAULT, Romain BARILLOT 0000-0002-9956-9103, Marie Pégard 0000-0002-8788-3154, Arman GRUMEL, Bernadette Julier 0000-0001-9976-8818

Abstract

Context Lucerne (M. sativa) can offer ecosystem services as a perennial living mulch, supporting annual cash crops through weed suppression and nitrogen fixation. However, trials with wheat reveal that current lucerne varieties are excessively competitive, leading to reduced wheat yields. Aims This study aimed to analyse the diversity within the M. sativa complex to identify traits that enhance lucerne effectiveness as a living mulch, focusing on the competition for light and nitrogen among lucerne, wheat and weeds. Methods Thirty diverse lucerne accessions were cultivated as living mulch with a winter wheat, over two years. Lucerne dormancy and growth habit effects were evaluated on wheat relative dominance during the early stages and on weed abundance. In later stages, the effects of lucerne height and lodging on wheat biomass and nitrogen status were also assessed. Key results Results indicated that lucerne dormancy and growth habit influenced wheat growth during early stages, with dormant and prostrate lucerne accessions reducing competition and enhancing wheat dominance. However, non-dormant and erect lucerne accessions effectively suppressed weeds but competed intensely with wheat. Tall and erect lucerne accessions supported wheat nitrogen status in the second year only. Lucerne lodging affected wheat growth, with tall lucerne reducing wheat biomass in the first year. Conclusions Lucerne should exhibit slow growth, moderate height, and low lodging to optimise its benefits. No variety in our panel exhibited all these desirable traits. Implications These findings highlight the need for breeding programs to combine lucerne beneficial traits as a living mulch into new varieties

CP25012  Accepted 07 May 2025

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