Results 181 to 190 of about 74,886 (206)
Editorial: Genetic regulatory mechanisms of osmotic stress response in plants. [PDF]
Seok HY, Lee BH, Moon YH.
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2013
The genus Hordeum, the barleys, with a basic chromosome number of 2. n=. 14, comprises about 30 grass species, with cultivated barley, Hordeum vulgare, being the world's fourth most important cereal. The grain of cultivated barley has two major uses: first, for malting to produce beer and spirits and, second, for animal feed and, occasionally, human ...
Snape, J. W., Powell, W., Waugh, R.
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The genus Hordeum, the barleys, with a basic chromosome number of 2. n=. 14, comprises about 30 grass species, with cultivated barley, Hordeum vulgare, being the world's fourth most important cereal. The grain of cultivated barley has two major uses: first, for malting to produce beer and spirits and, second, for animal feed and, occasionally, human ...
Snape, J. W., Powell, W., Waugh, R.
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Polyhaploids from a cross between Hordeum vulgare and the amphiploid (Hordeum jubatum and Hordeum compressum) [PDF]
Polyhaploids were obtained through the reduction of ploidy levels from a cross between a synthetic hexaploid amphiploid Hordeum jubatum L. and Hordeum compressum Griseb. and Hordeum vulgare L. The purpose of this work was to make a comparative study of the cytology, fertility, and morphology of the five polyhaploids and the amphiploid.
Robert P. Steidl+2 more
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Taxonomy of the Genus Hordeum and Barley (Hordeum vulgare)
2018Barley refers to the cereal Hordeum vulgare subsp. vulgare but also more generally to the barley genus Hordeum that, apart from cultivated barley, comprises more than 30 wild grass species distributed in temperate and arid regions of the world. Like wheat and rye, Hordeum belongs to the Triticeae tribe of grasses, most conspicuously characterized by ...
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Cryopreservation of Hordeum (Barley)
2002Barley is the fourth most important cereal after wheat, rice and maize. Although its distribution is generally similar to wheat, barley can be grown in much drier and colder regions than wheat. It is distributed mainly over the middle latitudes of the earth especially of the northern hemisphere.
Jun-Hui Wang, Chun-Nong Huang
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2020
Published as part of Buldrini, Fabrizio, Gentilini, Matteo, Bruni, Cinzia, Santini, Claudio, Alessandrini, Alessandro & Bosi, Giovanna, 2020, Flora vascolare spontanea della città di Modena: analisi del centro storico, pp. 3-56 in Natural History Sciences 7 (1) on page 31, DOI: 10.4081/nhs.2020.443, http://zenodo.org/record ...
Buldrini, Fabrizio+5 more
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Published as part of Buldrini, Fabrizio, Gentilini, Matteo, Bruni, Cinzia, Santini, Claudio, Alessandrini, Alessandro & Bosi, Giovanna, 2020, Flora vascolare spontanea della città di Modena: analisi del centro storico, pp. 3-56 in Natural History Sciences 7 (1) on page 31, DOI: 10.4081/nhs.2020.443, http://zenodo.org/record ...
Buldrini, Fabrizio+5 more
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Hordeum bulbosum Linnaeus 1756
2007Hordeum nodosum Linnaeus, Species Plantarum, ed. 2, 1: 126. 1762. "Habitat in Italia, Anglia." RCN: 717. Lectotype (Jørgensen in Nordic J. Bot. 2: 423. 1982): Herb. Linn. No. 103.4 (LINN). Current name: Hordeum bulbosum L. (Poaceae). Note: Baum & Jarvis (in Taxon 34: 531. 1985) agreed with Jørgensen’s choice but provided a more detailed discussion.
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Interspecific hybridization with Hordeum guatemalense [PDF]
Crosses were performed with the tetraploid, Guatemalan endemic species Hordeum guatemalense Von Bothmer et al. and nine other species of Hordeum. Hybrids were raised in five combinations. H. guatemalense is reproductively isolated from the other taxa. The genome is most closely related to the North American tetraploids H.
R. von Bothmer, Niels Jacobsen
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