Recent advances in the cytogenetics of the Lolium–Festuca
complex provide new opportunities for understanding
and manipulating complex physiological mechanisms such as drought and
cold resistance. This paper describes
breeding programmes involving hybrids between two species: L.
multiflorum, which offers good early growth and
high nutritive value, and F. arundinacea, which is more stress
tolerant. The programmes are designed to allow a
rapid recovery of the Lolium genome and to restrict numbers of
recombinants derived from Festuca. Use of
genomic in situ hybridization (GISH) and an isozyme marker demonstrates
how gene complexes from any part
of the Festuca genome can be introgressed into Lolium.
This enables us to construct genotypes combining desirable
traits of both Lolium and Festuca species. By
introgressing different Festuca genes into Lolium,
quantitative traits
such as tolerance to drought and cold can be ‘dissected’ into
their different components, to clarify their function.
Festuca genes for stress tolerance can be located by genomic
in situ hybridization (GISH) and assigned to regions
of chromosome arms in Lolium. Two Lolium genotypes
are described, in which genes for drought resistance
transferred from the F. pratensis sub-genome of F.
arundinacea onto chromosome 2 of Lolium. The two
drought-resistant lines have the high water conductance of Festuca
on their adaxial leaf surface and the low abaxial
conductance of Lolium. The paper also describes how
androgenesis of L. multiflorum × F. arundinacea hybrids has
led to the selection and characterization of genotypes with coacclimation
to
drought and freezing stress, in some
cases exceeding that in the Festuca parent.