Breeding perennial ryegrass (Lolium perenne L.) for turf usage: an assessment of genetic improvements in cultivars released in Europe, 1974-2004

An assessment of genetic improvement in turf‐type perennial ryegrass was performed at a network of six locations. A comparison was made of the turf performances of five natural populations, five forage‐type cultivars used for turf seeding until the 1980s and 31 turf‐type cultivars released from 1974...

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Published in:Grass and forage science Vol. 68; no. 1; pp. 33 - 48
Main Authors: Sampoux, J. P., Baudouin, P., Bayle, B., Béguier, V., Bourdon, P., Chosson, J. F., de Bruijn, K., Deneufbourg, F., Galbrun, C., Ghesquière, M., Noël, D., Tharel, B., Viguié, A.
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Oxford Blackwell Publishing Ltd 01-03-2013
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Summary:An assessment of genetic improvement in turf‐type perennial ryegrass was performed at a network of six locations. A comparison was made of the turf performances of five natural populations, five forage‐type cultivars used for turf seeding until the 1980s and 31 turf‐type cultivars released from 1974 to 2004. Populations and cultivars were also compared in two spaced‐plant experiments and in two seed‐yield trials. Trait regressions on registration year of turf‐type cultivars showed that breeding had been highly successful in improving the turf aesthetic merit (from +8·8 to +12·5% per decade according to seasons), wear tolerance (+5·4% per decade) and crown‐rust resistance (+8·9% per decade) and in lessening the turf height increase rate (−0·43 mm day−1 per decade). Turf winter greenness had been marginally improved, whereas summer greenness and seed yield had not been significantly changed. A multivariate analysis provided evidence that turf density and fineness played a major role in the visual assessment of turf aesthetic merit and that wear tolerance was closely associated with turf density. Conflicting trait associations may have precluded improvements in turf ground‐cover 3 months after sowing, turf winter greenness and turf persistency.
Bibliography:French Ministry of Agriculture
ArticleID:GFS896
INRA (French national institute for agronomical research)
ark:/67375/WNG-9LVC642D-1
ACVF (French forage and turf plant breeder society)
istex:B98A0C624C864CB6CAA2A56920226FA1A6767F8A
ObjectType-Article-2
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
ObjectType-Feature-1
content type line 23
ISSN:0142-5242
1365-2494
DOI:10.1111/j.1365-2494.2012.00896.x