Useful insights from evolutionary biology for developing perennial grain crops.
暂无分享,去创建一个
[1] Rachael L. Brown. What Evolvability Really Is , 2014, The British Journal for the Philosophy of Science.
[2] B. Gaut,et al. Epigenetics and plant genome evolution. , 2014, Current opinion in plant biology.
[3] Daniel J. Kvitek,et al. PHENOTYPIC AND GENOTYPIC CONVERGENCES ARE INFLUENCED BY HISTORICAL CONTINGENCY AND ENVIRONMENT IN YEAST , 2014, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[4] C. Schlichting,et al. PHENOTYPIC PLASTICITY AND EPIGENETIC MARKING: AN ASSESSMENT OF EVIDENCE FOR GENETIC ACCOMMODATION , 2014, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[5] Åke Brännström,et al. Genomics and the origin of species , 2014, Nature Reviews Genetics.
[6] Peter J. Bradbury,et al. The Genetic Architecture Of Maize Height , 2014, Genetics.
[7] T. Giraud,et al. The domestication and evolutionary ecology of apples. , 2014, Trends in genetics : TIG.
[8] Donna M Bond,et al. Small RNAs and heritable epigenetic variation in plants. , 2014, Trends in cell biology.
[9] R. Henry,et al. High-Throughput Sequencing and Mutagenesis to Accelerate the Domestication of Microlaena stipoides as a New Food Crop , 2013, PloS one.
[10] S. Matuszewski,et al. Rapid evolution of quantitative traits: theoretical perspectives , 2013, Evolutionary applications.
[11] T. F. Hansen. WHY EPISTASIS IS IMPORTANT FOR SELECTION AND ADAPTATION , 2013, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[12] T. Sharkey,et al. Life history and resource acquisition: Photosynthetic traits in selected accessions of three perennial cereal species compared with annual wheat and rye. , 2013, American journal of botany.
[13] Thomas E. Juenger,et al. Genotype-by-Environment Interaction and Plasticity: Exploring Genomic Responses of Plants to the Abiotic Environment , 2013 .
[14] Rachel S. Meyer,et al. Evolution of crop species: genetics of domestication and diversification , 2013, Nature Reviews Genetics.
[15] A. Blum. Heterosis, stress, and the environment: a possible road map towards the general improvement of crop yield. , 2013, Journal of experimental botany.
[16] Jeffrey E. Barrick,et al. Genome dynamics during experimental evolution , 2013, Nature Reviews Genetics.
[17] Bruno Clair,et al. The Evolutionary Fate of Phenotypic Plasticity and Functional Traits under Domestication in Manioc: Changes in Stem Biomechanics and the Appearance of Stem Brittleness , 2013, PloS one.
[18] S. Hiscock,et al. Rapid Speciation with Gene Flow Following the Formation of Mt. Etna , 2013, Genome biology and evolution.
[19] K. Olsen,et al. Crop plants as models for understanding plant adaptation and diversification , 2013, Front. Plant Sci..
[20] K. Wada,et al. Differential androgen receptor expression and DNA methylation state in striatum song nucleus Area X between wild and domesticated songbird strains , 2013, The European journal of neuroscience.
[21] Arne Traulsen,et al. The effect of population structure on the rate of evolution , 2013, Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences.
[22] S. Flint-Garcia. Genetics and consequences of crop domestication. , 2013, Journal of agricultural and food chemistry.
[23] Jill S Miller,et al. Developmental plasticity, genetic assimilation, and the evolutionary diversification of sexual expression in Solanum. , 2013, American journal of botany.
[24] F. Klironomos,et al. How epigenetic mutations can affect genetic evolution: model and mechanism. , 2013, BioEssays : news and reviews in molecular, cellular and developmental biology.
[25] Nathan M. Springer,et al. Progress toward understanding heterosis in crop plants. , 2013, Annual review of plant biology.
[26] L. DeHaan,et al. Soil and Water Quality Rapidly Responds to the Perennial Grain Kernza Wheatgrass , 2013 .
[27] S. Goff,et al. Heterosis in elite hybrid rice: speculation on the genetic and biochemical mechanisms. , 2013, Current opinion in plant biology.
[28] Isaac Salazar-Ciudad,et al. Adaptive dynamics under development-based genotype–phenotype maps , 2013, Nature.
[29] L. Rieseberg,et al. The molecular basis of invasiveness: differences in gene expression of native and introduced common ragweed (Ambrosia artemisiifolia) in stressful and benign environments , 2013, Molecular ecology.
[30] Paulo P. Amaral,et al. Non-coding RNAs in homeostasis, disease and stress responses: an evolutionary perspective. , 2013, Briefings in functional genomics.
[31] Jason G. Wallace,et al. Entering the second century of maize quantitative genetics , 2013, Heredity.
[32] W. G. Kelly,et al. Transgenerational epigenetic inheritance: how important is it? , 2013, Nature Reviews Genetics.
[33] Annalise B. Paaby,et al. The many faces of pleiotropy. , 2013, Trends in genetics : TIG.
[34] E. Goldschmidt. The Evolution of Fruit Tree Productivity: A Review , 2013, Economic Botany.
[35] Laura M. Shannon,et al. From Many, One: Genetic Control of Prolificacy during Maize Domestication , 2013, PLoS genetics.
[36] Jun Wang,et al. Comparative methylomics between domesticated and wild silkworms implies possible epigenetic influences on silkworm domestication , 2013, BMC Genomics.
[37] J. Masel,et al. Compensatory Evolution and the Origins of Innovations , 2012, Genetics.
[38] A. Agrawal,et al. Transgenerational defense induction and epigenetic inheritance in plants. , 2012, Trends in ecology & evolution.
[39] Rachel S. Meyer,et al. Patterns and processes in crop domestication: an historical review and quantitative analysis of 203 global food crops. , 2012, The New phytologist.
[40] Jinping Hua,et al. Genetic composition of yield heterosis in an elite rice hybrid , 2012, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
[41] R. Denison. Darwinian Agriculture: How Understanding Evolution Can Improve Agriculture , 2012 .
[42] G. Wagner,et al. Coming to Grips with Evolvability , 2012, Evolution: Education and Outreach.
[43] Jun Wang,et al. Single-base resolution maps of cultivated and wild rice methylomes and regulatory roles of DNA methylation in plant gene expression , 2012, BMC Genomics.
[44] Xun Xu,et al. Comparative population genomics of maize domestication and improvement , 2012, Nature Genetics.
[45] L. Bell,et al. Growth, yield and seed composition of native Australian legumes with potential as grain crops. , 2012, Journal of the science of food and agriculture.
[46] James C. Schnable,et al. Fractionation mutagenesis and similar consequences of mechanisms removing dispensable or less-expressed DNA in plants. , 2012, Current opinion in plant biology.
[47] E. Durand,et al. Flowering Time in Maize: Linkage and Epistasis at a Major Effect Locus , 2012, Genetics.
[48] D. Roff,et al. Do bottlenecks increase additive genetic variance? , 2012, Conservation Genetics.
[49] L. Andersson,et al. Heritable genome-wide variation of gene expression and promoter methylation between wild and domesticated chickens , 2012, BMC Genomics.
[50] Antoine Harfouche,et al. Accelerating the domestication of forest trees in a changing world. , 2012, Trends in plant science.
[51] L. Yant,et al. Genome-wide mapping of transcription factor binding reveals developmental process integration and a fresh look at evolutionary dynamics. , 2012, American journal of botany.
[52] M. Elias,et al. Ecological Approaches to Crop Domestication , 2012 .
[53] M. Stitt,et al. Genomic and metabolic prediction of complex heterotic traits in hybrid maize , 2012, Nature Genetics.
[54] Dan S. Tawfik,et al. Diminishing returns and tradeoffs constrain the laboratory optimization of an enzyme , 2012, Nature Communications.
[55] Ritsert C. Jansen,et al. Genome-Wide Epigenetic Perturbation Jump-Starts Patterns of Heritable Variation Found in Nature , 2011, Genetics.
[56] Eric J. Hayden,et al. Cryptic genetic variation promotes rapid evolutionary adaptation in an RNA enzyme , 2011, Nature.
[57] D. Egli. Time and the Productivity of Agronomic Crops and Cropping Systems , 2011 .
[58] Thomas Flatt,et al. Survival costs of reproduction in Drosophila , 2011, Experimental Gerontology.
[59] H. Heng,et al. SEX REDUCES GENETIC VARIATION: A MULTIDISCIPLINARY REVIEW , 2011, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[60] Carl T. Bergstrom,et al. Evolutionary principles and their practical application , 2011, Evolutionary applications.
[61] A. Wagner,et al. Phenotypic plasticity can facilitate adaptive evolution in gene regulatory circuits , 2011, BMC Evolutionary Biology.
[62] M. Purugganan,et al. ARCHAEOLOGICAL DATA REVEAL SLOW RATES OF EVOLUTION DURING PLANT DOMESTICATION , 2011, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[63] Jody Hey,et al. Divergence with Gene Flow: Models and Data , 2010 .
[64] A. Wagner,et al. Phenotypic robustness can increase phenotypic variability after nongenetic perturbations in gene regulatory circuits , 2010, Journal of evolutionary biology.
[65] K. Olsen,et al. Genetic perspectives on crop domestication. , 2010, Trends in plant science.
[66] Meredith V. Trotter,et al. Robustness and evolvability. , 2010, Trends in genetics : TIG.
[67] S. Otto,et al. Aging in a Long-Lived Clonal Tree , 2010, PLoS biology.
[68] T. S. Cox,et al. Progress in breeding perennial grains , 2010 .
[69] D. Futuyma. EVOLUTIONARY CONSTRAINT AND ECOLOGICAL CONSEQUENCES , 2010, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[70] J. P. Reganold,et al. Increased Food and Ecosystem Security via Perennial Grains , 2010, Science.
[71] T. S. Cox,et al. Missing domesticated plant forms: can artificial selection fill the gap? , 2010, Evolutionary applications.
[72] Marianne Elias,et al. The evolutionary ecology of clonally propagated domesticated plants. , 2010, The New phytologist.
[73] Simon Griffiths,et al. A Genetic Framework for Grain Size and Shape Variation in Wheat[C][W] , 2010, Plant Cell.
[74] J. Krug,et al. EVOLUTIONARY ADVANTAGE OF SMALL POPULATIONS ON COMPLEX FITNESS LANDSCAPES , 2010, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[75] R. A. Fischer,et al. Breeding and Cereal Yield Progress , 2010 .
[76] Ben Lehner,et al. Genes Confer Similar Robustness to Environmental, Stochastic, and Genetic Perturbations in Yeast , 2010, PloS one.
[77] Eric E. Schadt,et al. The Quantitative Genetics of Phenotypic Robustness , 2010, PloS one.
[78] F. Van Breusegem,et al. Energy use efficiency is characterized by an epigenetic component that can be directed through artificial selection to increase yield , 2009, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
[79] B. Walsh,et al. Abundant Genetic Variation + Strong Selection = Multivariate Genetic Constraints: A Geometric View of Adaptation , 2009 .
[80] C. Adami,et al. Impact of epistasis and pleiotropy on evolutionary adaptation , 2009, Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences.
[81] Bao Liu,et al. DNA methylation polymorphism in annual wild soybean (Glycine soja Sieb. et Zucc.) and cultivated soybean (G. max L. Merr.) , 2009 .
[82] M. Siegal,et al. Robustness: mechanisms and consequences. , 2009, Trends in genetics : TIG.
[83] A. Gerstein,et al. Ploidy and the causes of genomic evolution. , 2009, The Journal of heredity.
[84] F. Dohleman,et al. More Productive Than Maize in the Midwest: How Does Miscanthus Do It?1[W][OA] , 2009, Plant Physiology.
[85] E. Buckler,et al. Tracking footprints of maize domestication and evidence for a massive selective sweep on chromosome 10 , 2009, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
[86] L. Trut,et al. Animal evolution during domestication: the domesticated fox as a model , 2009, BioEssays : news and reviews in molecular, cellular and developmental biology.
[87] David L Stern,et al. Is Genetic Evolution Predictable? , 2009, Science.
[88] Dorian Q. Fuller,et al. The nature of selection during plant domestication , 2009, Nature.
[89] M. Heun,et al. On the domestication genetics of self-fertilizing plants , 2009 .
[90] Massimo Pigliucci,et al. What, if Anything, Is an Evolutionary Novelty? , 2008, Philosophy of Science.
[91] Robert B. Mitchell,et al. Heterosis in Switchgrass: Biomass Yield in Swards , 2008 .
[92] P. Phillips. Epistasis — the essential role of gene interactions in the structure and evolution of genetic systems , 2008, Nature Reviews Genetics.
[93] David L Stern,et al. The Loci of Evolution: How Predictable is Genetic Evolution? , 2008, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[94] A. Hoffmann,et al. Population Bottlenecks Increase Additive Genetic Variance But Do Not Break a Selection Limit in Rain Forest Drosophila , 2008, Genetics.
[95] Kaworu Ebana,et al. Deletion in a gene associated with grain size increased yields during rice domestication , 2008, Nature Genetics.
[96] Andreas Handel,et al. Heterogeneous Adaptive Trajectories of Small Populations on Complex Fitness Landscapes , 2008, PloS one.
[97] A. Wagner. Robustness and evolvability: a paradox resolved , 2008, Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences.
[98] Julie R. Etterson,et al. Transgenerational Plasticity Is Adaptive in the Wild , 2007, Science.
[99] S. Otto,et al. The Evolutionary Consequences of Polyploidy , 2007, Cell.
[100] J. Burke,et al. Quantitative Trait Locus Analysis of the Early Domestication of Sunflower , 2007, Genetics.
[101] D. Fuller. Contrasting Patterns in Crop Domestication and Domestication Rates: Recent Archaeobotanical Insights from the Old World , 2007, Annals of botany.
[102] J. Molofsky,et al. Increased genetic variation and evolutionary potential drive the success of an invasive grass , 2007, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
[103] Nathan M. Springer,et al. Allelic variation and heterosis in maize: how do two halves make more than a whole? , 2007, Genome research.
[104] D. Roff,et al. The evolution of trade‐offs: where are we? , 2007, Journal of evolutionary biology.
[105] A. Hoffmann,et al. Limits to the adaptive potential of small populations , 2006 .
[106] Randall L. Nelson,et al. Impacts of genetic bottlenecks on soybean genome diversity , 2006, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
[107] T. S. Cox,et al. Prospects for Developing Perennial Grain Crops , 2006 .
[108] L. Andersson,et al. Epistasis and the release of genetic variation during long-term selection , 2006, Nature Genetics.
[109] J. Masel. Cryptic Genetic Variation Is Enriched for Potential Adaptations , 2006, Genetics.
[110] B. Gill,et al. Molecular Characterization of the Major Wheat Domestication Gene Q , 2006, Genetics.
[111] Joachim Hermisson,et al. The role of epistatic gene interactions in the response to selection and the evolution of evolvability. , 2005, Theoretical population biology.
[112] Ryan A. Rapp,et al. Epigenetics and plant evolution. , 2005, The New phytologist.
[113] Massimo Pigliucci,et al. Evolution of phenotypic plasticity: where are we going now? , 2005, Trends in ecology & evolution.
[114] A. Badyaev. Stress-induced variation in evolution: from behavioural plasticity to genetic assimilation , 2005, Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences.
[115] K. Vrieling,et al. Maternal effects and heterosis influence the fitness of plant hybrids. , 2005, The New phytologist.
[116] T. S. Cox,et al. Perennial grain crops: A synthesis of ecology and plant breeding , 2005, Renewable Agriculture and Food Systems.
[117] R. Lande,et al. LOSS OF GAMETOPHYTIC SELF-INCOMPATIBILITY WITH EVOLUTION OF INBREEDING DEPRESSION , 2005, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[118] N. Barton,et al. EFFECTS OF GENETIC DRIFT ON VARIANCE COMPONENTS UNDER A GENERAL MODEL OF EPISTASIS , 2004, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[119] S. Otto,et al. Two steps forward, one step back: the pleiotropic effects of favoured alleles , 2004, Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B: Biological Sciences.
[120] V. Poncet,et al. Quantitative Trait Locus Analyses of the Domestication Syndrome and Domestication Process , 2004 .
[121] M. Vilà,et al. RAPID EVOLUTION OF AN INVASIVE PLANT , 2004 .
[122] P. Edwards,et al. Introduced plants of the invasive Solidago gigantea (Asteraceae) are larger and grow denser than conspecifics in the native range , 2004 .
[123] M. Pigliucci,et al. PERSPECTIVE: GENETIC ASSIMILATION AND A POSSIBLE EVOLUTIONARY PARADOX: CAN MACROEVOLUTION SOMETIMES BE SO FAST AS TO PASS US BY? , 2003, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[124] B. Lamont,et al. Are seed set and speciation rates always low among species that resprout after fire, and why? , 2003, Evolutionary Ecology.
[125] E. Klekowski. Plant clonality, mutation, diplontic selection and mutational meltdown , 2003 .
[126] E. Leger,et al. Invasive California poppies (Eschscholzia californica Cham.) grow larger than native individuals under reduced competition , 2003 .
[127] Jinping Hua,et al. Single-locus heterotic effects and dominance by dominance interactions can adequately explain the genetic basis of heterosis in an elite rice hybrid , 2003, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[128] S. Barrett,et al. PERSPECTIVE: PURGING THE GENETIC LOAD: A REVIEW OF THE EXPERIMENTAL EVIDENCE , 2002, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[129] J. Obeso,et al. The costs of reproduction in plants. , 2002, The New phytologist.
[130] L. Rieseberg,et al. Genetic analysis of sunflower domestication. , 2002, Genetics.
[131] V. A. Fasoula,et al. Principles underlying genetic improvement for high and stable crop yield potential , 2002 .
[132] Andrew H. Paterson,et al. Breeding Perennial Grain Crops , 2002 .
[133] M. Morgan,et al. Consequences of life history for inbreeding depression and mating system evolution in plants , 2001, Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B: Biological Sciences.
[134] S. Kresovich,et al. Molecular diversity, structure and domestication of grasses. , 2001, Genetical research.
[135] B. Garvik,et al. Principles for the buffering of genetic variation. , 2001 .
[136] John Doebley,et al. Epistatic and environmental interactions for quantitative trait loci involved in maize evolution , 1999 .
[137] Edwin H. Lowe,et al. Do population size bottlenecks reduce evolutionary potential? , 1999 .
[138] L. Rieseberg,et al. Transgressive segregation, adaptation and speciation , 1999, Heredity.
[139] E. Brummer,et al. Capturing heterosis in forage crop cultivar development , 1999 .
[140] Jody Hey,et al. The limits of selection during maize domestication , 1999, Nature.
[141] E. Bingham,et al. Population Improvement in Alfalfa: Fertility and S1 Forage Yield Performance in Original and Improved Populations , 1998 .
[142] T. Sinclair,et al. Historical changes in harvest index and crop nitrogen accumulation , 1998 .
[143] T. Bataillon,et al. The Evolution of Self‐Fertilization in Perennials , 1997, The American Naturalist.
[144] G. Wagner,et al. Adaptive Inertia Caused by Hidden Pleiotropic Effects , 1997 .
[145] O. Savolainen,et al. Inbreeding Depression in Conifers: Implications for Breeding Strategy , 1996, Forest Science.
[146] J. Doebley,et al. teosinte branched1 and the origin of maize: evidence for epistasis and the evolution of dominance. , 1995, Genetics.
[147] E. Garnier. Growth analysis of congeneric annual and perennial grass species , 1992 .
[148] A. J. Noordwijk,et al. Acquisition and Allocation of Resources: Genetic (CO) Variances, Selection, and Life Histories , 1992, The American Naturalist.
[149] W. G. Hill,et al. Strategies for increasing fixation probabilities of recessive mutations , 1991 .
[150] D. Charlesworth,et al. Effects of a change in the level of inbreeding on the genetic load , 1991, Nature.
[151] H. Carson. Increased genetic variance after a population bottleneck. , 1990, Trends in ecology & evolution.
[152] K. Weber. Increased selection response in larger populations. I. Selection for wing-tip height in Drosophila melanogaster at three population sizes. , 1990, Genetics.
[153] G. Hillman,et al. Measured domestication rates in wild wheats and barley under primitive cultivation, and their archaeological implications , 1990 .
[154] D. Matthies. Plasticity of reproductive components at different stages of development in the annual plant Thlaspi arvense L. , 1990, Oecologia.
[155] J. Coors. Response to Four Cycles of Combined Half-Sib and S1 Family Selection in Maize , 1988 .
[156] E. Klekowski. Progressive cross- and self-sterility associated with aging in fern clones and perhaps other plants , 1988, Heredity.
[157] C. Goodnight. ON THE EFFECT OF FOUNDER EVENTS ON EPISTATIC GENETIC VARIANCE , 1987, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[158] S. McCommas,et al. The Effect of an Experimental Bottleneck upon Quantitative Genetic Variation in the Housefly. , 1986, Genetics.
[159] D. Wiens. Ovule survivorship, brood size, life history, breeding systems,and reproductive success in plants , 1984, Oecologia.
[160] L. Gottlieb,et al. Genetics and Morphological Evolution in Plants , 1984, The American Naturalist.
[161] D. K. Belyaev. Destabilizing selection as a factor of domestication. , 1979 .
[162] J. Jinks,et al. The causes and consequences of non-normality in predicting the properties of recombinant inbred lines , 1977, Heredity.
[163] D. Zohary,et al. Beginnings of Fruit Growing in the Old World , 1975, Science.
[164] F. Sorensen. Embryonic Genetic Load in Coastal Douglas-Fir, Pseudotsuga menziesii var. Menziesii , 1969, The American Naturalist.
[165] R. Frankham,et al. The effects of population size and selection intensity in selection for a quantitative character in Drosophila. 3. Analyses of the lines. , 1968, Genetical research.
[166] R. Frankham,et al. The effects of population size and selection intesnity in selection for a quantitative character in Drosophila. II. Long-term response to selection. , 1968, Genetical research.
[167] N. Jaikumar,et al. Photosynthetic responses in annual rye, perennial wheat, and perennial rye subjected to modest source:sink ratio changes , 2014 .
[168] B. Blackman. Interacting duplications, fluctuating selection, and convergence: the complex dynamics of flowering time evolution during sunflower domestication. , 2013, Journal of experimental botany.
[169] R. Henry. Next-generation sequencing for understanding and accelerating crop domestication. , 2012, Briefings in functional genomics.
[170] J. Mattick,et al. A global view of genomic information--moving beyond the gene and the master regulator. , 2010, Trends in genetics : TIG.
[171] E. P. Guimarães,et al. Plant breeding and farmer participation. , 2009 .
[172] P. Langridge,et al. Cereal breeding takes a walk on the wild side. , 2008, Trends in genetics : TIG.
[173] Arnaud Le Rouzic,et al. Evolutionary potential of hidden genetic variation. , 2008, Trends in ecology & evolution.
[174] M. Vallejo‐Marín,et al. Correlated evolution of self-incompatibility and clonal reproduction in Solanum (Solanaceae). , 2007, The New phytologist.
[175] A. Bhattacharya. Age-dependent pollen abortion in cashew , 2005 .
[176] B. Coulman,et al. Genetic Relationships among Smooth Bromegrass Cultivars of Different Ecotypes Detected by AFLP Markers , 2004 .
[177] K. Basford,et al. Evaluation of experimental designs and spatial analyses in wheat breeding trials , 2000, Theoretical and Applied Genetics.
[178] E. Bingham,et al. Population improvement in lucerne (Medicago sativa L.): genetic analyses in original and improved populations , 1999 .
[179] J. Pate,et al. Reproductive Potential of Obligate Seeder and Resprouter Herbaceous Perennial Monocots (Restionaceae, Anarthriaceae, Ecdeiocoleaceae) from South-western Western Australia , 1997 .
[180] K. Lamkey,et al. Performance and Inbreeding Depression between a Synthetic and Three Improved Populations of Maize , 1991 .
[181] P. Wagoner,et al. Perennial grain development: past efforts and potential for the future. , 1990 .
[182] C. Marshall,et al. The Pattern of Abortion of Developing Seeds in Lolium perenne L. , 1989 .
[183] D. Roach,et al. MATERNAL EFFECTS IN PLANTS , 1987 .
[184] A. L. Black,et al. Row Spacing and Fertilization Influences on Forage and Seed Yields of Intermediate Wheatgrass, Russian Wildrye, and Green Needlegrass on Dryland 1 , 1969 .