Tissue culture techniques play an important role in the utilization of wild Cicer species for the improvement of cultivated chickpea. Utilization of wild Cicer species has become essential as a series of evolutionary bottlenecks have narrowed the genetic base of chickpea, thus making it susceptible to a range of diseases and pests. Crosses with wild Cicer can broaden its genetic base and introduce useful traits. Except for two wild species, none of the other Cicer species are cross-compatible. To use a range of Cicer species for the improvement of chickpea, embryo rescue and tissue culture techniques are necessary. The success of the cross with incompatible species depended on a range of techniques including the application of growth ...
Direct regeneration from mature embryo axes was achieved without intervening of callus phase in four...
The main constraint to the transfer of desired traits into cultivated chickpea from wild Cicer relat...
The cultivated chickpea, cicer arietinum L., and seven wild annual cicer species, viz. C. reticulatu...
The main constraint to the transfer of desired traits into cultivated chickpea from wild Cicer relat...
Many of the wild species of chickpea are not accessible to the improvement of chickpea due to cross ...
Androgenesis has not been reported in chickpea (Cicer arietinum L.). Interspecific hybridization bet...
Micropropagation is one of the most widely used tissue culture techniques for rapid asexual in vitr...
There are two main obstacles to chickpea improvement: 1) the long period of time between the breeder...
This paper reports the production of hybrid plants between C. arietinum and C. bijugum in vitro and ...
Chickpea is one of the most important leguminous, cool-season, food crops, cultivated prevalently in...
An efficient and reproducible protocol for the regeneration of shoots at high frequency was develope...
Cultivated chickpea (Cicer arietinum) rests on a narrow genetic base because of its single domestica...
Wild, perennial Cicer spp. were grown with varying success. Cicer judaicum and Cicer cuneatum were g...
Experiments were initiated at ICRISAT to cross kabuli chickpea cv. ICCV 6 and desi cv. GL 769 using ...
Chickpea is an important protein-rich crop with considerable diversity present among 44 annual Cicer...
Direct regeneration from mature embryo axes was achieved without intervening of callus phase in four...
The main constraint to the transfer of desired traits into cultivated chickpea from wild Cicer relat...
The cultivated chickpea, cicer arietinum L., and seven wild annual cicer species, viz. C. reticulatu...
The main constraint to the transfer of desired traits into cultivated chickpea from wild Cicer relat...
Many of the wild species of chickpea are not accessible to the improvement of chickpea due to cross ...
Androgenesis has not been reported in chickpea (Cicer arietinum L.). Interspecific hybridization bet...
Micropropagation is one of the most widely used tissue culture techniques for rapid asexual in vitr...
There are two main obstacles to chickpea improvement: 1) the long period of time between the breeder...
This paper reports the production of hybrid plants between C. arietinum and C. bijugum in vitro and ...
Chickpea is one of the most important leguminous, cool-season, food crops, cultivated prevalently in...
An efficient and reproducible protocol for the regeneration of shoots at high frequency was develope...
Cultivated chickpea (Cicer arietinum) rests on a narrow genetic base because of its single domestica...
Wild, perennial Cicer spp. were grown with varying success. Cicer judaicum and Cicer cuneatum were g...
Experiments were initiated at ICRISAT to cross kabuli chickpea cv. ICCV 6 and desi cv. GL 769 using ...
Chickpea is an important protein-rich crop with considerable diversity present among 44 annual Cicer...
Direct regeneration from mature embryo axes was achieved without intervening of callus phase in four...
The main constraint to the transfer of desired traits into cultivated chickpea from wild Cicer relat...
The cultivated chickpea, cicer arietinum L., and seven wild annual cicer species, viz. C. reticulatu...