Results 231 to 240 of about 57,484 (283)
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Hordeum Species ☆

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.
openaire   +3 more sources

Polyhaploids from a cross between Hordeum vulgare and the amphiploid (Hordeum jubatum and Hordeum compressum) [PDF]

open access: possibleCanadian Journal of Genetics and Cytology, 1983
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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Cryopreservation of Hordeum (Barley)

2002
Barley 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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Interspecific hybridization with Hordeum guatemalense [PDF]

open access: possibleGenetica, 1989
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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Elimination and duplication of particular Hordeum vulgare chromosomes in aneuploid interspecific Hordeum hybrids

Theoretical and Applied Genetics, 1988
Seeds formed in crosses Hordeum lechleri (6x) x H. vulgare (2x and 4x), H. arizonicum (6x) x H. v. (2x), H. parodii (6x) x H. v. (2x), and H. tetraploidum (4x) x H. v. (2x) produced plants at high or rather high frequencies through embryo rescue. Giemsa C-banding patterns were used to analyze chromosomal constitutions and chromosomal locations on the ...
Ib Linde-Laursen, R. von Bothmer
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HORDEUM DEPRESSUM CROSSES WITH THE HORDEUM MURINUM COMPLEX

Canadian Journal of Genetics and Cytology, 1965
Plant type and chromosome behavior of the Hordezrvz I J T Z L T ~ I ~ Z L ~ ~ ~ coillplex were reported by A~Iorrison (1958), Ailorrison et al. (1959) and Rajhathy and R~Iorrison (1962). They have labeled the genonies as GG for H . ~ ~ ~ L C Z L ~ J Z Steud. (2X), GGMhlI for H. I ~ ~ L Y ~ I ~ Z L ~ L. (4X) and G G M h l H H for H.
Lu Chyuan Liu, A. B. Schooler
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Architecture of the chloroplast PSI–NDH supercomplex in Hordeum vulgare

Nature, 2021
Liangliang Shen   +11 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Barley (Hordeum vulgare)

1974
Cultivated barley, Hordeum vulgare L., is one of the leading experimental organisms in genetic studies of flowering plants. The wide use of this important agricultural crop plant in genetic studies may be attributed to its diploid nature, low chromosome number (2n = 14), world-wide distribution, high degree of self-fertility, ease of hybridization ...
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Bestäubungsökologische Merkmale und Phylogenie von Hordeum L. subgen. Hordeum

Flora, 1984
Summary 282 wild races of Hordeum L. subgen. Hordeum have been studied concerning pollination ecology. Anther length is a good character for demonstrating the breeding system. Races of Hordeum spontaneum from primary habitats have relatively long anthers (> 4 mm). They are postulated as initial forms for the evolution of cultivated and weedy barleys.
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The Hordeum murinum Complex in Australia

Australian Journal of Botany, 1976
Barley grass (in Australia usually called Hordeum leporinum Link) was collected at 88 sites in South Australia and Victoria and grown at Northfield, near Adelaide, S.A. Time to Aowering was noted and each line was identified taxonomically. Specimens from the Australian herbaria were examined.
P. M. Kloot, P. S. Boyce, P. S. Cocks
openaire   +2 more sources

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