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II. Materials and Methods Seven cultivars of tall fescue were seeded into lysimeters for seven months, and then evaluated in the summer of 1994 for their ET rates, clipping yields, and above-ground morphological traits (Tables 1 to 6). The above-ground morphological diversity within this seven-cultivar collection was fairly representative of the morphological diversity
observed within tall fescue cultivars utilized for turfgrass purposes.
Well-established turfgrass grown under a management program reflective of the production of high quality tall fescue was evaluated in this study (Tables 1 and 2).
ET rates were measured by the water-balance method in four separate trials (Tables 2, 3 and 4).Note that ET rates were measured when the tall fescue lysimeters were placed under field conditions, were well watered, and were in the last three days of a seven-day mowing cycle (Tables 3 and 4). Environmental conditions during the four trials were recorded by a CIMIS station located at the UCR
Turfgrass Research Project (Table 5).
Clipping yields and leaf extension rates also were measured during each ET rate trial (Tables 4 and 6).
Leaf density, length, and width were measured between the third and fourth ET rate trials (Tables 4 and 6).
Visual turfgrass quality was measured during and after the study (Table 6).
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