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2008 - 481 p.

Using genetics to advance breeding: the winter barley example

Hayes P.M., Skinner J.S., Chen T.H.H., Szücs P.

The winter hardiness of cereal crops is associated with low temperature tolerance, vernalization (the requirement of exposure to an extended period of low temperature), and photoperiod sensitivity. Understanding the genetics of these traits, using agronomically relevant germplasm, will provide new opportunities for sustainable and productive barley production. Using a new generation of germplasm and massively parallel data sets we are anticipating new insights into the ancestral and derived conditions of barley.

Mots-clés    

AMELIORATION GENETIQUE, CARACTERE AGRONOMIQUE, CULTURE D'HIVER, HORDEUM, MATERIEL GENETIQUE, ORGE

Citer cet article    

Hayes P.M., Skinner J.S., Chen T.H.H., Szücs P. Using genetics to advance breeding: the winter barley example. In : Molina-Cano J.L. (ed.), Christou P. (ed.), Graner A. (ed.), Hammer K. (ed.), Jouve N. (ed.), Keller B. (ed.), Lasa J.M. (ed.), Powell W. (ed.), Royo C. (ed.), Shewry P. (ed.), Stanca A.M. (ed.). Cereal science and technology for feeding ten billion people: genomics era and beyond. Zaragoza : CIHEAM / IRTA, 2008. p. 193-195. (Options Méditerranéennes : Série A. Séminaires Méditerranéens; n. 81). Meeting of the Eucarpia Cereal Section, 2006/11/13-17, Lleida (Spain). http://om.ciheam.org/om/pdf/a81/00800838.pdf