Search Results - (Author, Cooperation:D. B. Moody)

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  1. 1
    Staff View
    Publication Date:
    2013-07-05
    Publisher:
    Nature Publishing Group (NPG)
    Print ISSN:
    0028-0836
    Electronic ISSN:
    1476-4687
    Topics:
    Biology
    Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Medicine
    Natural Sciences in General
    Physics
    Keywords:
    Adaptation, Physiological ; Anoxia/*genetics/metabolism ; Bacterial Proteins/genetics/metabolism ; Binding Sites ; Chromatin Immunoprecipitation ; Gene Expression Profiling ; *Gene Regulatory Networks/genetics ; Genomics ; Lipid Metabolism/genetics ; Metabolic Networks and Pathways/*genetics ; Models, Biological ; Mycobacterium tuberculosis/drug effects/*genetics/*metabolism/physiology ; Oxygen/pharmacology ; Proteolysis ; RNA, Messenger/genetics/metabolism ; Reproducibility of Results ; Sequence Analysis, DNA ; Transcription Factors/genetics/metabolism ; Tuberculosis/metabolism/microbiology
    Published by:
    Latest Papers from Table of Contents or Articles in Press
  2. 2
    Staff View
    ISSN:
    1573-5036
    Keywords:
    boron ; genetic variation ; pea ; toxicity
    Source:
    Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics:
    Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes:
    Abstract In a greenhouse experiment nine current Australian cultivars of pea were grown to flowering time under five levels of soil boron (0, 10, 20, 30 and 40 mg kg−1) applied to the soil. This study was conducted to identify the genetic range in tolerance to boron within the group and to identify specific responses which may be utilised as selection criteria in a breeding program. Significant differences in response to increasing levels of boron were found between cultivars for dry-weight yield, and boron concentrations were lowest in shoots of the most tolerant cultivars. Of the other parameters measured, emergence was not affected but plant height and the number of nodes were reduced and the severity of symptom expression increased at the higher boron treatments. Symptom expression was the most efficient observation for predicting the response of cultivars, as determined by dry-weight yield and concentration of boron in shoots, and it was found that the correlation coefficients between symptoms and the latter two measurements were r=−0.78 (p〈0.01) and r=0.81 (p〈0.01), respectively. Early Dun, Dundale, Alma and Maitland were the more tolerant of the cultivars and these happen to be the most widely grown cultivars in southern Australia.
    Type of Medium:
    Electronic Resource
    URL:
    Articles: DFG German National Licenses