Microlaena stipoides, commonly known as weeping grass, is a distant relative of rice. It is a drought, frost and shade tolerant perennial evergreen plant and produces seeds similar to rice. M. stipoides can be used for grain production and additionally it can be grazed as a pasture. This species responds well to nitrogen application and also regular irrigation, making commercial production possible and making it a target for domestication. Extensive sequencing and comparative mapping has established a high degree of conservation between rice and other grasses, allowing the isolation of the corresponding homologues of important rice genes in other grasses. Whole genome shotgun sequencing has been performed on M. stipoides using Illumina Geno...
Over the last 10,000 years, crop domestication has been the single most important human cultural dev...
Rice feeds more than half of the world population. Its small genome size and ease in transformation ...
International audienceThe African cultivated rice (Oryza glaberrima) was domesticated in West Africa...
Extensive sequencing and comparative mapping has established a high degree of conservation between r...
Global food demand, climatic variability and reduced land availability are driving the need for dome...
<div><p>Global food demand, climatic variability and reduced land availability are driving the need ...
A native Australian perennial grass has been targeted for accelerated domestication utilising a comb...
Due to geographic isolation and a short agricultural history, plant species from Australia have not ...
Australian grasses represent a significant and diverse resource that has not been subjected to domes...
Wild crop relatives represent a source of novel alleles for crop genetic improvement. Screening biod...
Global cereal production is sourced from approximately only 0.2% of the world’s grass (Poaceae) spec...
Rice (Oryza sativa L.) has been cultivated as a major crop for more than 7000 years and it is the ma...
African rice (Oryza glaberrima Steud) is one of the two independently domesticated rice species, the...
With global cereal production sourced from approximately only 0.2% of the world’s grass (Poaceae) sp...
Motivation The major breakthrough at the turn of the millennium was the completion of genome sequenc...
Over the last 10,000 years, crop domestication has been the single most important human cultural dev...
Rice feeds more than half of the world population. Its small genome size and ease in transformation ...
International audienceThe African cultivated rice (Oryza glaberrima) was domesticated in West Africa...
Extensive sequencing and comparative mapping has established a high degree of conservation between r...
Global food demand, climatic variability and reduced land availability are driving the need for dome...
<div><p>Global food demand, climatic variability and reduced land availability are driving the need ...
A native Australian perennial grass has been targeted for accelerated domestication utilising a comb...
Due to geographic isolation and a short agricultural history, plant species from Australia have not ...
Australian grasses represent a significant and diverse resource that has not been subjected to domes...
Wild crop relatives represent a source of novel alleles for crop genetic improvement. Screening biod...
Global cereal production is sourced from approximately only 0.2% of the world’s grass (Poaceae) spec...
Rice (Oryza sativa L.) has been cultivated as a major crop for more than 7000 years and it is the ma...
African rice (Oryza glaberrima Steud) is one of the two independently domesticated rice species, the...
With global cereal production sourced from approximately only 0.2% of the world’s grass (Poaceae) sp...
Motivation The major breakthrough at the turn of the millennium was the completion of genome sequenc...
Over the last 10,000 years, crop domestication has been the single most important human cultural dev...
Rice feeds more than half of the world population. Its small genome size and ease in transformation ...
International audienceThe African cultivated rice (Oryza glaberrima) was domesticated in West Africa...