Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Åshild Ergon is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Åshild Ergon.


Plant Science | 2014

Overwintering of herbaceous plants in a changing climate. Still more questions than answers.

Marcin Rapacz; Åshild Ergon; Mats Höglind; Marit Jørgensen; Barbara Jurczyk; Liv Østrem; Odd Arne Rognli; Anne Marte Tronsmo

The increase in surface temperature of the Earth indicates a lower risk of exposure for temperate grassland and crop to extremely low temperatures. However, the risk of low winter survival rate, especially in higher latitudes may not be smaller, due to complex interactions among different environmental factors. For example, the frequency, degree and length of extreme winter warming events, leading to snowmelt during winter increased, affecting the risks of anoxia, ice encasement and freezing of plants not covered with snow. Future climate projections suggest that cold acclimation will occur later in autumn, under shorter photoperiod and lower light intensity, which may affect the energy partitioning between the elongation growth, accumulation of organic reserves and cold acclimation. Rising CO2 levels may also disturb the cold acclimation process. Predicting problems with winter pathogens is also very complex, because climate change may greatly influence the pathogen population and because the plant resistance to these pathogens is increased by cold acclimation. All these factors, often with contradictory effects on winter survival, make plant overwintering viability under future climates an open question. Close cooperation between climatologists, ecologists, plant physiologists, geneticists and plant breeders is strongly required to predict and prevent possible problems.


Theoretical and Applied Genetics | 2011

QTL analyses and comparative genetic mapping of frost tolerance, winter survival and drought tolerance in meadow fescue (Festuca pratensis Huds.)

Vibeke Alm; Carlos S. Busso; Åshild Ergon; Heidi Rudi; Arild Larsen; Michael W. Humphreys; Odd Arne Rognli

Quantitative trait loci (QTLs) for frost and drought tolerance, and winter survival in the field, were mapped in meadow fescue (Festuca pratensis Huds.) and compared with corresponding traits in Triticeae and rice to study co-location with putatively orthologous QTLs and known abiotic stress tolerance genes. The genomes of grass species are highly macrosyntenic; however, the Festuca/Lolium and Triticeae homoeologous chromosomes 4 and 5 show major structural differences that is especially interesting in comparative genomics of frost tolerance. The locations of two frost tolerance/winter survival QTLs on Festuca chromosome 5F correspond most likely to the Fr-A1 and Fr-A2 loci on wheat homoeologous group 5A chromosomes. A QTL for long-term drought tolerance on chromosome 3F (syntenic with rice 1) support evidence from introgression of Festuca genome segments onto homoeologous Lolium chromosomes (3L) that this genome region is an excellent source of tolerance towards drought stress. The coincident location of several stress tolerance QTL in Festuca with QTL and genes in Triticeae species, notably dehydrins, CBF transcription factors and vernalisation response genes indicate the action of structural or regulatory genes conserved across evolutionarily distant species.


Scientific Reports | 2015

Red clover (Trifolium pratense L.) draft genome provides a platform for trait improvement.

Jose de Vega; Sarah Ayling; Matthew Hegarty; Dave Kudrna; Jose Luis Goicoechea; Åshild Ergon; Odd Arne Rognli; Charlotte Jones; Martin T. Swain; René Geurts; Chunting Lang; Klaus F. X. Mayer; Stephan Rössner; Steven Yates; Kathleen Webb; Iain S. Donnison; Giles E. D. Oldroyd; Rod A. Wing; Mario Caccamo; Wayne Powell; Michael T. Abberton; Leif Skøt

Red clover (Trifolium pratense L.) is a globally significant forage legume in pastoral livestock farming systems. It is an attractive component of grassland farming, because of its high yield and protein content, nutritional value and ability to fix atmospheric nitrogen. Enhancing its role further in sustainable agriculture requires genetic improvement of persistency, disease resistance, and tolerance to grazing. To help address these challenges, we have assembled a chromosome-scale reference genome for red clover. We observed large blocks of conserved synteny with Medicago truncatula and estimated that the two species diverged ~23 million years ago. Among the 40,868 annotated genes, we identified gene clusters involved in biochemical pathways of importance for forage quality and livestock nutrition. Genotyping by sequencing of a synthetic population of 86 genotypes show that the number of markers required for genomics-based breeding approaches is tractable, making red clover a suitable candidate for association studies and genomic selection.


Acta Agriculturae Scandinavica Section B-soil and Plant Science | 2003

Testing Snow Mould Resistance of Winter Wheat: Inoculation Experiments with Microdochium nivale in the Field

Åshild Ergon; Helge Skinnes; Anne Marte Tronsmo

Winter survival of 24 winter wheat lines was evaluated at three locations in south-eastern Norway in 1996-97 and 1997-98. Plants were inoculated with a mycelial suspension of Microdochium nivale or a preparation of M. nivale mycelium grown on boiled wheat grains, or they remained uninoculated. Artificially applied inoculum led to a higher disease pressure in some of the trials only. The effect of environmental conditions on variation in winter survival among wheat lines was greater than that of inoculation, and it was therefore difficult to draw a definite conclusion on the variation in specific snow mould resistance.


Frontiers in Plant Science | 2016

Vernalization Requirement and the Chromosomal VRN1-Region can Affect Freezing Tolerance and Expression of Cold-Regulated Genes in Festuca pratensis

Åshild Ergon; Tone Ingeborg Melby; Mats Höglind; Odd Arne Rognli

Plants adapted to cold winters go through annual cycles of gain followed by loss of freezing tolerance (cold acclimation and deacclimation). Warm spells during winter and early spring can cause deacclimation, and if temperatures drop, freezing damage may occur. Many plants are vernalized during winter, a process making them competent to flower in the following summer. In winter cereals, a coincidence in the timing of vernalization saturation, deacclimation, downregulation of cold-induced genes, and reduced ability to reacclimate, occurs under long photoperiods and is under control of the main regulator of vernalization requirement in cereals, VRN1, and/or closely linked gene(s). Thus, the probability of freezing damage after a warm spell may depend on both vernalization saturation and photoperiod. We investigated the role of vernalization and the VRN1-region on freezing tolerance of meadow fescue (Festuca pratensis Huds.), a perennial grass species. Two F2 populations, divergently selected for high and low vernalization requirement, were studied. Each genotype was characterized for the copy number of one of the four parental haplotypes of the VRN1-region. Clonal plants were cold acclimated for 2 weeks or vernalized/cold acclimated for a total of 9 weeks, after which the F2 populations reached different levels of vernalization saturation. Vernalized and cold acclimated plants were deacclimated for 1 week and then reacclimated for 2 weeks. All treatments were given at 8 h photoperiod. Flowering response, freezing tolerance and expression of the cold-induced genes VRN1, MADS3, CBF6, COR14B, CR7 (BLT14), LOS2, and IRI1 was measured. We found that some genotypes can lose some freezing tolerance after vernalization and a deacclimation–reacclimation cycle. The relationship between vernalization and freezing tolerance was complex. We found effects of the VRN1-region on freezing tolerance in plants cold acclimated for 2 weeks, timing of heading after 9 weeks of vernalization, expression of COR14B, CBF6, and LOS2 in vernalized and/or deacclimated treatments, and restoration of freezing tolerance during reacclimation. While expression of VRN1, COR14B, CBF6, LOS2, and IRI1 was correlated, CR7 was associated with vernalization requirement by other mechanisms, and appeared to play a role in freezing tolerance in reacclimated plants.


Current Opinion in Plant Biology | 2016

Freezing tolerance revisited — effects of variable temperatures on gene regulation in temperate grasses and legumes

Mallikarjuna Rao Kovi; Åshild Ergon; Odd Arne Rognli

Climate change creates new patterns of seasonal climate variation with higher temperatures, longer growth seasons and more variable winter climates. This is challenging the winter survival of perennial herbaceous plants. In this review, we focus on the effects of variable temperatures during autumn/winter/spring, and its interactions with light, on the development and maintenance of freezing tolerance. Cold temperatures induce changes at several organizational levels in the plant (cold acclimation), leading to the development of freezing tolerance, which can be reduced/lost during warm spells (deacclimation) in winters, and attained again during cold spells (reacclimation). We summarize how temperature interacts with components of the light regime (photoperiod, PSII excitation pressure, irradiance, and light quality) in determining changes in the transcriptome, proteome and metabolome.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Global transcriptome changes in perennial ryegrass during early infection by pink snow mould

Mallikarjuna Rao Kovi; Mohamed Abdelhalim; Anil Kunapareddy; Åshild Ergon; Anne Marte Tronsmo; May Bente Brurberg; Ingerd Skow Hofgaard; Torben Asp; Odd Arne Rognli

Lack of resistance to pink snow mould (Microdochium nivale) is a major constraint for adaptation of perennial ryegrass (Lolium perenne L.) to continental regions with long-lasting snow cover at higher latitudes. Almost all investigations of genetic variation in resistance have been performed using cold acclimated plants. However, there may be variation in resistance mechanisms that are functioning independently of cold acclimation. In this study our aim was to identify candidate genes involved in such resistance mechanisms. We first characterized variation in resistance to M. nivale among non-acclimated genotypes from the Norwegian cultivar ‘Fagerlin’ based on relative regrowth and fungal quantification by real-time qPCR. One resistant and one susceptible genotype were selected for transcriptome analysis using paired-end sequencing by Illumina Hiseq 2000. Transcriptome profiles, GO enrichment and KEGG pathway analysis indicate that defense response related genes are differentially expressed between the resistant and the susceptible genotype. A significant up-regulation of defense related genes, as well as genes involved in cell wall cellulose metabolic processes and aryl-alcohol dehydrogenase (NADP+) activity, was observed in the resistant genotype. The candidate genes identified in this study might be potential molecular marker resources for breeding perennial ryegrass cultivars with improved resistance to pink snow mould.


Theoretical and Applied Genetics | 2006

Quantitative trait loci controlling vernalisation requirement, heading time and number of panicles in meadow fescue (Festuca pratensis Huds.)

Åshild Ergon; C. Fang; Ø. Jørgensen; T. S. Aamlid; Odd-Arne Rognli


European Journal of Plant Pathology | 2010

The effect of potential resistance inducers on development of Microdochium majus and Fusarium culmorum in winter wheat

Ingerd Skow Hofgaard; Åshild Ergon; Birgitte Henriksen; Anne Marte Tronsmo


Crop Science | 2016

Seed Yield of Norwegian and Swedish Tetraploid Red Clover ( Trifolium pratense L.) Populations

Helga Amdahl; Trygve Aamlid; Åshild Ergon; Mallikarjuna Rao Kovi; Petter Marum; Muath Alsheikh; Odd Arne Rognli

Collaboration


Dive into the Åshild Ergon's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Odd Arne Rognli

Norwegian University of Life Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Anne Marte Tronsmo

Norwegian University of Life Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Halvor Solheim

Norwegian Forest and Landscape Institute

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Leif Sundheim

Norwegian University of Life Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Mallikarjuna Rao Kovi

Norwegian University of Life Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Bjørn Økland

Forest Research Institute

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Helga Amdahl

Norwegian University of Life Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Marina Azzaroli Bleken

Norwegian University of Life Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Muath Alsheikh

Norwegian University of Life Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge