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Journal articles 2012

Documents

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Getting the most out of sorghum low-input field trials in West Africa using spatial adjustment Getting the most out of sorghum low-input field trials in West Africa using spatial adjustment

Leiser WL, Rattunde HF, Piepho HP and Parzies HK (2012). Getting the most out of sorghum low-input field trials in West Africa using spatial adjustment. Journal of Agronomy and Crop Science, 198(5):349–359. (DOI: 10.1111/j.1439-037X.2012.00529.x). (G7010.03.03). Not open access: view abstract

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Molecular marker analysis and validation of resistance to cassava mosaic disease in elite cassava genotypes in Nigeria Molecular marker analysis and validation of resistance to cassava mosaic disease in elite cassava genotypes in Nigeria

Okogbenin E, Egesi CN, Olasanmi B, Ogundapo O, Kahya S, Hurtado P, Marin J, Akinbo O, Mba C, Gomez H, de Vicente C, Baiyeri S, Uguru M, Ewa F, Fregene M (2012). Molecular marker analysis and validation of resistance to cassava mosaic disease in elite cassava genotypes in Nigeria. Crop Science 52(6): 2576–2586. (DOI: 10.2135/cropsci2011.11.0586). (G7009.10/G7010.01.02). Not open access: view abstract

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Selection strategy for sorghum targeting phosphorus-limited environments in West Africa: analysis of multi-environment experiments Selection strategy for sorghum targeting phosphorus-limited environments in West Africa: analysis of multi-environment experiments

Leiser, WL, Rattunde HFW, Piepho H-P, Weltzien E, Diallo A, Melchinger AE, Parzies HK, Haussmann BIG (2012). Selection strategy for sorghum targeting phosphorus-limited environments in West Africa: analysis of multi-environment experiments. Crop Science 52(6):2517–2527. (DOI: 10.2135/cropsci2012.02.0139). (G7010.03.03). Not open access: view abstract

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Detection and integration of gene mapping of downy mildew resistance in maize inbred lines though linkage and association Detection and integration of gene mapping of downy mildew resistance in maize inbred lines though linkage and association

Phumichai C, Chunwongse J, Jampatong S, Grudloyma P, Pulam T, Doungchan W, Wongkaew A and Kongsiri N (2012). Detection and integration of gene mapping of downy mildew resistance in maize inbred lines though linkage and association. Euphytica 187(3):369–379 (DOI: 10.1007/s10681-012-0699-8). Not open access; view abstract. (G4007.04)

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Phenotyping pearl millet for adaptation to drought Phenotyping pearl millet for adaptation to drought

Vadez V, Hash T, Bidinger FR and Kholova J (2012). Phenotyping pearl millet for adaptation to drought. Frontiers in Plant Physiology 3:386. (DOI: 10.3389/fphys.2012.00386).

Pearl millet is highly resilient to some of the driest areas of the world, like the Sahel area or fringes of the Thar desert in India. Despite this, there is a wealth of variation in pearl millet genotypes for their adaptation to drought and the object of this paper was to review some related work in the past 25 years to harness these capacities toward the breeding of better adapted cultivars. Work on short duration cultivars has been a major effort. Pearl millet has also some development plasticity thanks to a high tillering ability, which allows compensating for possible drought-related failure of the main culm under intermittent drought. The development of molecular tools for breeding has made great progress in the last 10–15 years and markers, maps, EST libraries, BACs are now available and a number of quantitative trait loci (QTLs) for different traits, including drought, have been identified. Most of the work on drought has focused on the drought tolerance index (DTI), an index that reflect the genetic differences in drought adaptation that are independent of flowering time and yield potential.

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Modelling possible benefits of root related traits to enhance terminal drought adaptation of chickpea Modelling possible benefits of root related traits to enhance terminal drought adaptation of chickpea

Vadez V, Soltani A, Sinclair TR (2012). Modelling possible benefits of root related traits to enhance terminal drought adaptation of chickpea. Field Crops Research 137:108–115. (DOI: 10.1016/j.fcr.2012.07.022). Not open access: view abstract

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Breeding the Thai jasmine rice variety KDML105 for non-age related broad-spectrum resistance to bacterial blight disease based on combined marker-assisted and phenotypic selection Breeding the Thai jasmine rice variety KDML105 for non-age related broad-spectrum resistance to bacterial blight disease based on combined marker-assisted and phenotypic selection

Win KM, Korinsak S, Jantaboon J, Siangliw M, Lanceras-Siangliw J, Sirithunya P, Vanavichit A, Pantuwan G, Jongdee B, Sidhiwong N and Toojinda T (2012). Breeding the Thai jasmine rice variety KDML105 for non-age related broad-spectrum resistance to bacterial blight disease based on combined marker-assisted and phenotypic selection. Field Crops Research 137:186–194. (DOI: 10.1016/j.fcr.2012.09.007). (G4009.09). Not open access: view abstract

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Genetic dissection of developmental behaviour of grain weight in wheat under diverse temperature and water regimes Genetic dissection of developmental behaviour of grain weight in wheat under diverse temperature and water regimes

Li S, Wang C, Chang X, Jing R (2012). Genetic dissection of developmental behaviour of grain weight in wheat under diverse temperature and water regimes. Genetica 140(7-9):393–405. (DOI: 10.1007/s10709-012-9688-z). (G7010.02.01). Not open access: view abstract

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Markers for breeding heat-tolerant cowpea Markers for breeding heat-tolerant cowpea

Lucas MR, Ehlers JD, Huynh BL, Diop NN, Roberts PA, and Close TJ (2012). Markers for breeding heat-tolerant cowpea. Molecular Breeding published online 13 November 2012. Also printed in 2013. (DOI: 10.1007/s11032-012-9810-z.) (G6010.02/G7010.07.01). Not open access: view online

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Phenotyping for drought adaptation in wheat using physiological traits Phenotyping for drought adaptation in wheat using physiological traits

Monneveux P, Jing R, Misra SC (2012). Phenotyping for drought adaptation in wheat using physiological traits. Frontiers in Plant Physiology 3:429. (DOI: 10.3389/fphys.2012.00429).

Wheat (Triticum spp) is one of the first domesticated food crops. It represents the first source of calories (after rice) and an important source of proteins in developing countries. As a result of the Green Revolution, wheat yield sharply increased due to the use of improved varieties, irrigation, pesticides, and fertilizers. The rate of increase in world wheat production, however, slowed after 1980, except in China, India, and Pakistan. Being adapted to a wide range of moisture conditions, wheat is grown on more land area worldwide than any other crop, including in drought prone areas. In these marginal rain-fed environments where at least 60 m ha of wheat is grown, amount and distribution of rainfall are the predominant factors influencing yield variability. Intensive work has been carried out in the area of drought adaptation over the last decades. Breeding strategies for drought tolerance improvement include: definition of the target environment, choice and characterization of the testing environment, water stress management and characterization, and use of phenotyping traits with high heritability. The use of integrative traits, facilitated by the development and application of new technologies (thermal imaging, spectral reflectance, stable isotopes) is facilitating high throughput phenotyping and indirect selection, consequently favoring yield improvement in drought prone environments.

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