Skip to main content
Skip to site map
United States Department of Agriculture
Agricultural Research Service
0
Cart
Welcome!
***THIS IS A TESTING SITE ONLY.***
Please do not place germplasm orders on this site.
GRIN-Global
Menu
USDA National Plant Germplasm System
Version:
2.3.12 [npgstest -- bhunt2312-0204]
Menu
Accessions
Descriptors
Reports
GRIN Taxonomy
Search Taxonomy
Crop Wild Relative Data
Nodulation Data
Regulations
World Economic Plants
About GRIN Taxonomy
GRIN
USDA Genetic Resource Collections
About GRIN-Global
Use of Cookies
NPGS Distribution Policy
Software Disclaimer
GRIN-U
Help
Contact Us
Your Profile
Your Profile
Your Web Request History
Your Address Book
Your Wish List
Details for: PI 674472,
Festuca pratensis
Huds. subsp.
pratensis
, 'Hidden Valley'
Summary
Passport
Taxonomy
Other
Pedigree
IPR
Observation
Summary Data
Taxonomy:
Festuca pratensis
Huds. subsp.
pratensis
Cultivar:
'Hidden Valley'
Origin:
Collected – Wisconsin, United States
Maintained:
Western Regional PI Station
Received by NPGS:
06 Apr 2015
Improvement Status:
Cultivar
Form Received:
Seed
Life Form:
Perennial
Life Cycle:
Perennial
Backup Location:
National Laboratory for Genetic Resources Preservation
Availability
Form
Quantity
Note
Inventory
Cart
Seed
100 count
PI 674472 2015o SD
THE ARTICLE BELOW CAME FROM THE UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE AGRESEARCH MAGAZINEA forgotten forage grass imported from Europe in the 1800s could soon be helping to boost cattle and dairy production. The grass, which has adapted well to parts of the Upper Midwest, has been released by Agricultural Research Service scientists in Madison, Wisconsin.The forage grass was discovered on a farmer's shaded hilltop in a long-time pasture that had never been seeded with commercial forages. Cattle thrived on it and it gradually spread from the hilltop grove into gullies and open areas, possibly because cattle eating the ripe seed spread it in their manure. The farmer fed hay made from it to more cattle, to spread it further. He also eventually began consulting with ARS plant geneticist Michael Casler and his colleagues at the U.S. Dairy Forage Research Center.Casler and his colleagues have since spent more than a decade evaluating the grass, named Hidden Valley for the farm where it was discovered. In field trials and other tests, they evaluated how cattle respond to it and how well it grows in a variety of locations. They found that it produces a 9-percent lower yield than orchardgrass and tall fescue, but has a 9-percent higher rate of neutral detergent fiber digestibility. That means cattle digest it more easily and eat more of it, in turn gaining more weight and producing more milk. Research also shows that it has adapted to the Upper Mississippi River Basin by developing several desirable traits. It is drought tolerant and will survive freezing temperatures and repeated grazing.DNA tests show it to be a meadow fescue brought to the United States by European settlers in the 1800s. By the 1950s, meadow fescues had largely been replaced with higher yielding tall fescues and other grasses. But they never completely disappeared as forages. A movement toward managed grazing operations in the 1980s prompted renewed interest in them, and ARS researchers and colleagues at the University of Wisconsin evaluated 91 varieties in extensive field trials, including seven European varieties, on three Wisconsin dairy farms. But Hidden Valley stands out, according to Casler. "What was originally found on this farm is really remarkable," he says.Like other meadow fescues, it has an endophyte (symbiotic fungus) that gives it some degree of environmental protection. But it does not produce the compounds found in tall fescue that can sometimes harm cattle. Surveys of the Upper Midwest "Driftless Region," which includes parts of Illinois, Iowa, and Minnesota, also show that it can be found in a wide range of habitats and seems to grow well on land taken out of crop production and allowed to revert to pasture.Casler released Hidden Valley in June 2014, publishing an announcement in the Journal of Plant Registrations, and seed is available through the National Plant Germplasm System.--By Dennis O'Brien, Agricultural Research Service Information Staff.
There are no images for this accession.
Core Passport Data
Taxonomy:
Festuca pratensis
Huds. subsp.
pratensis
Cultivar:
'Hidden Valley'
Origin:
Collected – Wisconsin, United States
Maintained:
Western Regional PI Station
Received by NPGS:
06 Apr 2015
Improvement Status:
Cultivar
Form Received:
Seed
Life Form:
Perennial
Life Cycle:
Perennial
Source History
Collected
PRE 06 April 2015.
Wisconsin, United States
Locality:
Hidden Valley Farms, Mineral Point, Wisconsin
Coordinates:
47.7923, -90.2627
(Map it)
Environment description:
Collection was made at 17 locations on the farm.
Developed
06 April 2015.
Wisconsin, United States
Developer(s):
Casler, Michael D., USDA, ARS
Accession Names and Identifiers
'Hidden Valley'
Type: Cultivar name
Narrative
Seed originated on Hidden Valley Farms, Mineral Point, WI. Original collection was made at 17 locations on the farm, centered on GPS coordinates 42.7923N, 90.2627W.
Festuca pratensis
Huds. subspp.
pratensis
Genus:
Festuca
Family:
Poaceae
(alt. Gramineae)
Subfamily:
Pooideae
Tribe:
Poeae
Subtribe:
Loliinae
Nomen number:
417971
Verified:
02/12/2001
by ARS Systematic Botanists.
Other conspecific taxa
Festuca pratensis
Huds.
(305 active accession[s])
Festuca pratensis
Huds. subsp.
apennina
(De Not.) Hegi
(9 active accession[s])
Autonyms (not in current use), synonyms and invalid designations
Homotypic Synonym(s)
Schedonorus pratensis
(Huds.) P. Beauv.
Common names
Name
References
Annotations
The Taxonomic Name Of The Accession When It Was Received:
23 Apr 2015, from
Schedonorus pratensis
(Huds.) P. Beauv. to
Festuca pratensis
Huds. subsp.
pratensis
Other Links
Storage Information Form
Actions
Pathogens
Vouchers
Citations
Casler, M. D., G. E. Brink, J. H. Cherney, E. van Santen, M. W. Humphreys, T. Yamada, K. Tamura, N. W. Ellison, & C. Opitz.
2015.
Registration of 'Hidden Valley' meadow fescue
. J. Pl. Registr. 9(3):294.
Number of accessions cited:
1
Pedigree
Intellectual Property Rights
Journal of Plant Registration
. CV-100, FESCUE. Issued: 01 Sep 2015.
Casler, M. D., G. E. Brink, J. H. Cherney, E. van Santen, M. W. Humphreys, T. Yamada, K. Tamura, N. W. Ellison, & C. Opitz.
2015.
Registration of 'Hidden Valley' meadow fescue
. J. Pl. Registr. 9(3):294.
Material Transfer Agreement