Abstract Seed lines of prairie grass (Bromus unioloides H.B.K.) collected overseas and throughout New Zealand were compared for some growth characters at Kaikohe, Palmerston North, Lincoln, and Gore. There was a large range among lines, and especially among overseas lines, in plant habit, yield, earliness of heading, and resistance to head smut. Within the New Zealand collection lines obtained from pastures were on the average less erect, slightly more producti.Je, later to begin heading, and more resistant to Head smut than were lines from ungrazed sites. Commercial lines tended to be of the pasture type, except in yield. There was a significant negative correlation between susceptibility to head smut of a line and its spring yield. and also between earliness to head of a line and its latitude of origin in New Zealand. Overseas lines generally yielded well at Palmerston North, moderately at Gore, but poorly at Kaikohe. The highest yielding New Zealand lines at all three stations were those collected from...
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