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Sweetclovers


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Summary

Common Name
Melilotus spp. are not true clovers, which are Trifolium spp. (Taylor, 1985). Bailey and Bailey (1976) in Hortus III listed the common names for Melilotus alba Desrousseaux as being white sweetclover, white melilot, and Bukhara clover and for Melilotus officinalis (L.) Pall., yellow sweetclover, melilot, yellow melilot, and melist. According to Duke (1981), the common names for Melilotus alba Desrousseaux are white sweetclover, Hubam, and white melilot; for Melilotus officinalis Lamarck, the common name is yellow sweetclover.

McLeod (1982) gave as common names for the white species, white sweet clover and Bokhara sweet clover, and for the yellow species yellow sweet clover, official melilot, and common sweet clover.

Metcalfe (1985) listed several common names under the general heading of sweetclover, including annual yellow sweetclover (Melilotus indica All.), Banat sweetclover (Melilotus dentata [W. & K.] Pers.), yellow sweetclover (Melilotus officinalis Lamarck or Melilotus officinalis [L.] Lamarck), white sweetclover (Melilotus alba Medik. or Melilotus alba Desrousseaux), Daghestan sweetclover (Melilotus suaveolens Ledeb.), Israel (Hubam) sweetclover (Melilotus alba var. annua Coe), and sourclover or sour sweetclover (Melilotus indica All.).

The approved common and scientific names for the two species treated here are white sweet clover (Melilotus alba Desrousseaux) and yellow sweetclover (Melilotus officinalis [L.] Lamarck) (Metcalfe, 1985).

Scientific Name
There is some confusion over the correct species names and authorities for both white and yellow sweetclovers. Duke (1981) termed white sweetclover Melilotus alba Medik., whereas Munz (1973) termed it Melilotus albus Desrousseaux. Bailey and Bailey (1976) in Hortus III listed the species names as Melilotus alba Desrousseaux for white sweetclover, and Melilotus officinalis (L.) Pall. for yellow sweetclover. The yellow species was termed Melilotus officinalis Lamarck by Duke (1981), but Munz (1973) called it Melilotus officinalis (L.) Lamarck. Metcalfe (1985) listed the approved names for white sweet clover as Melilotus alba Desrousseaux and for yellow sweetclover, Melilotus officinalis [L.] Lamarck. The annual form of white sweetclover was called Melilotus alba Desrousseaux var. annua Coe by Bugg and Ellis (1990).

Cultivar
White sweetclover occurs in both annual and biennial forms. 'Hubam,' 'Emerald,' 'Floranna,' and 'Israel' are cultivars of the annual form of white sweetclover (Madson, 1951). 'Denta' is a late-maturing, low-coumarin variety. 'Arctic,' an early-maturing winter-hardy variety (presumably biennial) and the low-coumarin cv 'Polara' are both adapted to Canada. The low-coumarin gene was transferred from Melilotus dentata (Waldst. and Kit.) Pers. to M. alba and then to M. officinalis (Duke, 1981).

According to Duke (1981), yellow sweetclover comprises 3 subspecies and about 16 ecotypes and forms. Recommended cultivars include 'Albotrea.' 'Common Yellow,' 'Erector,' 'Madrid,' 'Switzer,' and 'Goldtop.'

Seed Description
Seeds of white sweetclover have hard testa and must be scarified to speed germination (Duke, 1981).

Seeds of yellow sweetclover occur one or two to the pod and are smooth, ovoid-elliptical, 1.5-3 mm. long, ca 1.5 mm broad, and yellow or greenish-yellow, sometimes with purple spots. Seeds are said to poison horses (Duke, 1981).

Seedling Description
For yellow sweetclover, the seed leaves (cotyledons) are very small, twice as long as broad, and pale green. The first true leaf is heart shaped or roundish, and wavy around the edges. The second and subsequent true leaves are trifoliate (Fischer et al., 1978).

Mature Plant Description
According to the description by Duke (1981), white sweetclover is an annual or biennial, erect or decumbent herb, stem 1 m or more tall, stipules entire; leaves trifoliate, leaflets lanceolate or oblanceolate to narrowly oblong, rarely ovate, 1-2.5 cm long; rachis of larger leaves, excluding terminal petiolule, often prolonged more than 4 mm beyond lateral leaflets; racemes numerous, 5-20 cm long, on peduncles up to 4 cm long; pedicels 1-2 mm long; calyx about 2 mm long; corolla white, 4-6 mm long; style 1.7-2.3 mm long; pod with weak irregular network of veins.

Duke (1981) described yellow sweetclover as a biennial or annual herb with strong taproot; stems erect or ascending, 0.3-2.8 m tall, often tinged with red; leaves trifoliate, the leaflets of the lower and middle leaves broadly oval, lanceolate to rhomboid-ovate, 1-5 cm long, rounded at tip, those of upper leaves oblong-lanceolate, rounded or truncate at tip, irregularly dentate or entire; stipules entire, 8-12 mm long, lanceolate or subulate; racemes lax, 30-80 flowered, 4-15 cm long; pedicels 2-2.5 mm long; clayx 2-3 mm long, teeth as long as tube or shorter; corolla yellow, 4.5-7 mm long, standard and wings more or less equal to or up to 1 mm longer than keel; style 1.7-2.3 mm long, often persisting; ovules 4-6, rarely 3 or 8; pods ca, 3.4 mm long, 2-2.5 mm broad , 1.5 mm thick, compressed with strong rugose transverse veins or wrinkled gray to straw-colored, rarely black, obtuse at tip.

Temperature
Sweetclovers are considered resistant to cold (Madson, 1951).

Duke, (1981) detailed the thermal tolerances for the sweetclovers. White sweetclover tolerates an annual mean temperature range of 5.7-24.3 C, with the mean of 54 cases being 12.7; the corresponding figures for yellow white sweetclover are 4.9-21.8 C, with the mean of 47 cases being 10.9 C . White and yellow sweetclovers tolerate high and low temperatures and are seldom winter-killed. Both species are said to be tolerant of both heat and frost. There are intervarietal differences in winterhardiness for white sweetclover, with 'Arctic' and 'Polara' both tolerant of Canadian conditions. For yellow sweetclover, cv 'Madrid' was noted as relatively resistant to fall freezes.

Geographic Range
White sweetclover is native to Europe and western and central Asia, south to India; it is assigned to the Eurosiberian and Mediterranean Centers of Diversity, and is native to the Boreal Moist to Wet through Subtropical Dry to Moist Forest Life Zones, and persists up to an altitude of 2,000 m (Duke, 1981). As noted by Munz (1973), in California, the species is abundantly naturalized in waste places, especially in damp zones in southern California. It occurs from British Columbia to the East Coast of the United States.

Based on Duke's (1981) account, yellow sweetclover is assigned to the Eurosiberian and Mediterranean Centers of Diversity, and is native from Europe to central temperate Asia and western China, south to North Africa, Ethiopia, Eritrea, and Kenya, and has been introduced to various temperate reions, including North and South America. It is cultivated in India. It ranges form the Boreal Moist through Warm Temperate Thorn to Moist Forest Life Zones, and persists up to an altitude of 4,000 m. In California, Munz (1973) noted that yellow sweetclover is less commonly naturalized than white sweetclover or sourclover. According to McLeod (1982), sweetclovers will grow almost anywhere, given sufficient and suitably-distributed rainfall. They grow in southern Canada and throughout the United States, thriving in both semiarid and humid regions.

Water
White sweetclover tolerates from 0.9-16.0 dm of precipitation, with the mean of 54 cases being 7.8. The corresponding figures for yellow sweetclover are 3.1-16.0 dm of precipitation, with the mean of 54 cases being 7.8 (Duke, 1981).

Sweetclovers grow well where annual rainfall exceeds 17 inches, suitably distributed throughout the year, and often persist in areas too dry for alfalfa. Yellow sweetclover withstands drier conditions than white (McLeod, 1982).

Zachariassen and Power (1991) found that crimson clover showed a consistently-higher water use efficiency (g of dry matter produced per liter of water evapotranspired) than hairy vetch at 10, 20, and 30C. White sweetclover showed intermediate values.

Goldstein (1989) wrote that principal considerations in drought-proofing a farm on the northern Great Plains are: (1) improving soil structure through integrated use of grasses, (2) integrating animals with grain-farming operations, (3) effective management of yellow sweetclover, (4) stubble mulching to improve infiltration of water, and (5) timing tillage to have maximum positive impact on soil improvement. Yellow sweetclover is useful when grown in combination with a brome grass or a winter-hardy orchard grass like cv 'Pierre'. This is better than a solid stand of yellow sweetclover for both soil improvement and grazing. Such a mixture could be grazed or stubble mulched by undercutting the plants and leaving the residue on the surface. This approach to tillage leads to better water infiltration and efficiency of nitrogen use in the following grain crops than does plowing.

Nutrients
Sweetclovers have deep taproots and might be expected to mine nutrients from deeper soil strata (Bugg, pers. comm.).

McLeod (1982) ascribed to sweetclovers the ability to convert the insoluble nutrients phosphorus and potassium from forms unavailable to other plants.

Soil pH
White sweetclover tolerates pH of from 4.8-8.2, with the mean of 50 cases being 6.7, whereas the corresponding figures for yellow sweetclover tolerates pH of from 4.8-8.2, with the mean of 43 cases being 6.6. Both species are regarded as tolerant of alkali, high pH, and limestone (Duke, 1981).

Sweetclovers are intolerant of acid soils (Duke, 1981; Brinton, 1989). According to Johnny's Selected Seeds (1983), white sweetclover requires soil pH of at least 6.8. and best growth occurs on neutral or alkaline soil with abundant lime. If soil pH is less than 6, soil should be limed well in advance of seeding (McLeod, 1982).

Soil Type
Duke (1981) detailed the soil tolerances of the two main sweetclovers. White sweetclover tolerates heavy clays to light sands and does especially well on calcareous soils; it is said to tolerate alkali, limestone, high pH, mine sites, poor soil, slope, and waterlogging. Yellow sweetclover tolerates clays to light sands but does best on fertile, well-limed and -drained soils with good organic matter content. Yellow sweetclover has been said to tolerate alkali, high pH, limstone, slope, and both heavy and poor soils.

McLeod (1982) confirmed that sweetclovers tolerate cemented clays and gravels to poor sand and stated that the the deep roots open the subsoil. He also mentioned that the white species prefers clay loams and that the yellow does best on loam soils.

Madson (1951) stated that sweetclover tolerates loam to heavy soil types.

Schonbeck (1988) wrote that yellow sweetclover does well on soils that will not support true clovers (Trifolium spp.).

Shade Tolerance
Duke (1981) mentioned various tolerances of sweetclovers, but did not list shade tolerance.

Salinity Tolerance
Yellow sweetclover tolerates 3-6 mmhos of salinity (Duke, 1981).

Herbicide Sensitivity
White sweetclover is unusually susceptible to a number of herbicides, especially 2,4D (Duke, 1981).

Life Cycle
Duke (1981) listed both white and yellow sweetclovers as annual and biennial herbs. McLeod (1982) wrote that both species are summer growing, biennial legumes but that there are annual varieties of Melilotus alba. The latter point was confirmed by both Johnny's Selected Seeds (1983) and Madson (1951) who both cited cv 'Hubam' as an example of the annual form of the white species. 'Hubam' is usually seeded in the spring and tilled under in the fall (Johnny's Selected Seeds, 1983).

Seeding Rate
Seeding rate is 10 to 15 lbs/acre of scarified or 25 lbs/acre of unscarified seed (McLeod, 1982). Johnny's Selected Seeds (1983) suggested that white sweetclover be seeded at 15 lbs/acre. Madson (1951) recommended that cv 'Hubam' be seeded at 20 to 30 lbs/acre. Duke (1981) wrote that both white and yellow sweetclovers should be seeded at 11-17 or for the white species up to 25 kg/ha.

Seeding Depth
Sweetclovers should be sown at a depth of 1/2 inch (McLeod, 1982).

Seeding Method
The seed of white sweetclover has a hard testa, requiring scarification to ensure prompt germination (Duke, 1981). Seed of sweetclover should be covered lightly (Johnny's Selected Seeds, 1983). In Mendocino wine vineyards, double disking followed by broadcasting and cultipacking was used (Bugg, pers. comm.).

In New York state, Scott and Burt (1985) evaluated cover crops after overseeding into corn 6-18" high were medium red clover, mammoth red clover, alfalfa, yellow sweetclover, alsike clover, birdsfoot trefoil, Canada field peas, Austrian winter peas, cowpeas, perennial or annual ryegrass, medium red clover + ryegrass, or medium red clover + rye. Of these, alfalfa, medium red clover, yellow sweetclover, hairy vetch, ryegrass, and medium red clover + ryegrass have performed well.

Seeding Dates
Sweetclovers may be sown during the fall or spring (McLeod, 1982); Johnny's Selected Seeds (1983) of Maine wrote that biennial forms of both the white and yellow species can be sown in spring or late summer. Unscarified seed of both species germinates better when sown in the fall; white sweetclover also does better with fall sowing (McLeod, 1982). Madson (1951) suggested sowing from October to November. The annual form of white sweetclover (cv 'Hubam') did well in Massachusetts when sown in early May (Bugg and Ellis, 1990).

Inoculation
White and yellow sweetclovers require rhizobial strain "A" ??????(Nitragin Co.), the same strain used for alfalfa (Burton and Martinez, 1980).

Seed Cost
Seed cost of sweetclovers is low (Madson, 1951). Fred Thomas (pers. comm.) in 1993 listed the market retail prices as $2.50/lb for 'Hubam' annual white sweet clover and $0.80/lb for yellow sweetclover.

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