The papers in this volume form the core of a meeting called Putting
Plant Physiology on the Map,
which took place at the University of Wales Bangor, in April 1997. The
idea for the meeting came from
Professor Sid Thomas, and the scientific organization was done by him and
his colleagues at the
Institute for Grassland and Environmental Research, Aberystwyth. The aim
was to convene a small
group of physiologists and geneticists who are concerned with the genetic
mapping of plant physiological
traits, to produce a meeting and published volume which would summarize
some
of the methods and
results of existing mapping programmes, and more importantly to proselytize
by laying out for unconverted plant physiologists the merits of taking
a
genetical approach. Writing as one of the unconverted,
the meeting succeeded admirably: the power and utility of a genetical approach
became very clear. Not
only does mapping provide unequivocal answers to a range of physiological
questions, it also enables one
to ask questions that simply cannot be addressed by conventional physiological
approaches. The progress
which has been made in understanding salt tolerance, for example, adds
a
completely new dimension to
the experiments in the classical literature.
Those with experience of putting plant physiological characteristics
onto
genetical maps inevitably have
a language of their own, and for the newcomer the acquisition of this
language is a daunting task. Since
conversion was one of our aims, we have provided a chapter (Jones, Ougham
& Thomas) which explains
to the beginner just how maps are made, and in so doing hopefully eases
the problem of acquiring the
language. Virgin mappers should read this chapter first; the experienced
can move straight to the rest
and sample the variety of approaches which have been used.