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Pollen morphology ofCicer L. - wild and cultivated annual species

Feddes Repertorium, 1995
AbstractPollen morphological studies have been carried out in all the annual species of Cicer L. including four varieties of the cultivated species C. arietinum, using LM and SEM. Pollen grains are 3‐zonocolporate with large lolongate endocolpia in C. arietinum, C. cuneatum, C. judaicum, C. pinnatifidum, C. reticulatum and C.
M. Chaturvedi, D. Yunus, K. Datta
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Anatomical comparison of wild-type and non-nodulating mutant chickpea (Cicer arietinum)

Canadian Journal of Botany, 1990
Non-nodulating chickpea (Cicer arietinum L.) mutant PM233B was characterized anatomically via comparison with its normally nodulating parent line ICC 640. Root hair and cortical cell infection threads, cortical cell division centers, and nodule formation were observed by light microscopy in serial root sections of ICC 640, but were absent in PM233B ...
Leslie J. Matthews, Thomas M. Davis
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Cytology of Cicer Songaricum Steph. ex DC, a Wild Relative of Chickpea

Genetic Resources and Crop Evolution, 1999
The karyotype of C. songaricum has been analysed which shows a closer similarity with those of C. reticulatum, C. echinospermum and C. arietinum, as compared with other annual or perennial species studied. The 2C DNA amount of C. songaricum is 20.5% less than that of C.
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Molecular assessment of wild and cultivated Cicer species using ISSR markers

Ecological Genetics and Genomics, 2022
Pratibha Yadav   +2 more
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Additional Sources of Tolerance to Cold in Cultivated and Wild Cicer Species

Crop Science, 1995
Cold tolerance is an important prerequisite for winter sowing of chickpea (Cicer arietinum L.) in Mediterranean environments. Cold‐tolerant lines identified earlier at ICARDA are sometimes not tolerant enough to tolerate exceptionally cold winters which occur occasionally.
K. B. Singh   +2 more
openaire   +1 more source

First insights into the biochemical and molecular response to cold stress in Cicer microphyllum, a crop wild relative of chickpea (Cicer arietinum)

Russian Journal of Plant Physiology, 2017
Identifying a potential crop wild relative (CWR) of legumes, especially one with high abiotic stress tolerance, has been a priority of plant breeders for many decades. Traditionally CWRs have been selected based on biometrical traits observed in the field, however this methodology is insufficient for research into nonmorphological traits such as stress
R. K. Singh   +5 more
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Resistance to Phytophthora medicaginis Hansen and Maxwell in wild Cicer species and its use in breeding root rot resistant chickpea (Cicer arietinum L.)

Australian Journal of Agricultural Research, 2008
Phytophthora root rot caused by Phytophthora medicaginis is a major disease of chickpea in Australia. Only partial resistance, derived from chickpea, is available in Australian cultivars. Five wild Cicer species were compared with chickpea cv. Jimbour (moderately resistant) in a field experiment.
E. J. Knights   +3 more
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Introgression from wild Cicer reticulatum to cultivated chickpea for productivity and disease resistance

Plant Breeding, 2005
AbstractInterspecific hybridization is known to improve productivity and resistance to diseases in many crops. Therefore, an attempt was made to introgress productivity and disease resistance into chickpea from wild Cicer species. The true F1 hybrids of cultivated chickpea genotypes ‘L550’ and ‘FGK45’ with C. reticulatum were backcrossed twice to their
S. Singh   +3 more
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Inspection of Crop Wild Relative (Cicer microphyllum) as Potential Genetic Resource in Transgenic Development

2019
Crop wild relative (CWR) is a wild ancestor plant/related taxon, closely related to cultivated domesticated plant whose geographic origins can be traced to regions known as Vavilov centers. CWRs have been significantly important to provide efficient traits to crops for improving agricultural production leading toward sustainable agro-ecosystems ...
Rupesh Kumar Singh   +5 more
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Genome evolution and diversity of wild and cultivated potatoes

Nature, 2022
Dié Tang, Jinzhe Zhang, Hongbo Li
exaly  

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