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Global genomic population structure of wild and cultivated oat reveals signatures of chromosome rearrangements

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Bekele WA   +47 more
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Population biology of Avena

Theoretical and Applied Genetics, 1974
The population structure of wild oats (Avena fatua) sampled in two prune orchards was described using Wright's model of a population having many largely isolated, small subdivisions. A high degree of genetic differentiation was observed among the individual colonies for lemma color, leaf sheath hairiness and isoenzymatic loci.
Subodh Jain, K. N. Rai, K. N. Rai
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THE PATHOGENICITY OF ISOLATES OF SEPTORIA AVENAE F. SP. AVENAE

Canadian Journal of Botany, 1960
All isolates of Septoria avenae Frank f. sp. avenae studied were pathogenic on selected varieties of oats and there was no evidence of a differential reaction. The virulence of the isolates varied greatly and this variability was inherent in all groups of isolates.
F. L. Drayton, R. V. Clark
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Chromosomes in Avena

Nature, 1925
WINGE (Hereditas, 5, pp. 241–286, 1924) has recently shown that irregular chromosome conditions, somewhat different from any previously reported, occur in certain aberrant forms of wheat. A cytological study of “false wild oats” begun here last summer has shown chromosome conditions in at least one homozygous strain of this “fatuoid” form of Avena ...
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Oat (Avena sativa L.) [PDF]

open access: possible, 2014
Agrobacterium-mediated transformation is a suitable method to transform different cultivars using different systems of A. tumefaciens strains and binary vectors as well as selection cassettes. We describe here a detailed protocol for two cultivars, one naked and one husked, using the AGL1 strain and the pGreen vector containing the nptII selection ...
Anna Nadolska-Orczyk, Sebastian Gasparis
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Plastids of the Avena Coleoptile

Nature, 1960
PHOTOTROPIC curvature of the Avena coleoptile may, for reasons which have been summarized elsewhere1, be mediated through the plastids. Geotropic curvature may have a similar basis, for it has long been thought2,3 that the geotropic responses of both shoots and roots are mediated by special starch grains or ‘statoliths’, and these in fact are plastids ...
Helen P. Sorokin, Kenneth V. Thimann
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Acidovorax avenae subsp. avenae . [Descriptions of Fungi and Bacteria].

Descriptions of Fungi and Bacteria, 1994
Abstract A description is provided for Acidovorax avenae subsp. avenae . Information is included on the disease caused by the organism, its transmission, geographical distribution, and hosts. HOSTS: Agropyron intermedium, A. trichophorum, Avena sativa, Bromus catharticus, B.
null UK, CAB International   +1 more
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Metabolism of diclofop‐methyl in cell cultures of Avena sativa and Avena fatua

Physiologia Plantarum, 1982
The metabolism of the herbicide, diclofop‐methyl (methyl‐2‐[4‐(2′, 4′‐dichlorophenoxy) phenoxy]propanoate), in cell suspension cultures of Avena sativa L. (cv. Garry) and in callus of Avena fatua L. (transferred to liquid) was determined as a function of time (8 h to about 3 weeks) and was compared to previous metabolism data from intact plants.
D. G. Davies   +2 more
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