8,865 research outputs found

    Association Mapping for Common Bunt Resistance in Wheat

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    Common bunt, caused by Tilletia caries and T. foetida, is a fungal disease of wheat world wide. Infection, occurring via seed borne teliospores, is generally controlled by the application of seed treatments prior to sowing. Farming systems like organic agriculture with a very limited range of organic seed treatments available rely heavily on common bunt resistance genes within wheat. In the framework of the BIOBREED project an association study in winter wheat was conducted, aiming at the identification of genetic loci linked to resistance towards common bunt in wheat. 152 European wheat cultivars were phenotyped for their resistance reaction for the two consecutive years 2011/12 at Agrologica research station at Mariager. Infection was scored as percent infected ears. The scorings were log-transformed to fit a disease scoring scale ranging from 1 to 9. The association analysis was performed for each year separately as well as for the mean scoring of the two years. The wheat cultivars were genotyped with DArT markers, yielding 1832 polymorphic loci. The association analysis was conducted using the computer program Genstat, with the ASReml module. Minimun allele frequency for the association analysis was set to 0.07. 13 out of the total of1832 marker in our study were linked to common bunt resistance in wheat (-log10(P) >3). These marker are located on 8 out of the 21 wheat chromosomes. Comparisons of these findings with other published results are difficult since only very little is known about the chromosomal location of common bunt resistance genes/QTL in wheat. Chromosome 2B was previously reported to carry gene(s) for common bunt resistance. Findings of our analysis are in accordance with this: 4 of the linked marker resided on this chromosome. Further, another two linked marker were found on chromosome 2D, another chromosome previously reported to carry common bunt resistance genes. Our study shows the possibilities of finding makers linked to common bunt resistance in wheat, and of using these markers for marker assisted selection of wheat cultivars tailored for the needs of organic agriculture

    Common bunt resistant wheat composite cross populations

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    Utilising diverse populations instead of single line varieties is expected to lead to a number of advantages in cereal production. These include reduced epidemics of plant diseases, improved weed competition and better exploitation of soil nutrients, resulting in improved yield stability. However, a number of challenges must be met before diverse wheat populations can be introduced into commercial wheat production: one of these is the development of breeding technologies based on mass selection which enable breeders and farmers to improve specific traits in populations and maintain diversity at the same time. BIOBREED is a project started in Denmark in 2011 to meet these challenges for wheat population breeding. The project is focusing on the development of tools and methods for mass selection of traits relevant for organic and low input production, where it is expected that the highest benefits of utilizing diverse populations can be achieved. BIOBREED focuses on three main aspects of wheat population breeding for organic and low input production systems: i) common bunt (caused by Tilletia caries) resistance, ii) selection for improved protein content and iii) the influence on population diversity of different selection pathways. Selection for common bunt resistance in wheat composite cross populations 33 crosses were made between 23 common bunt resistant winter wheat varieties in order to generate two populations. Progeny of all crosses was bulked in the F 3 to constitute the first population Pop.No.Sel. Prior to the creation of the second population Pop.Sel, the F 3 of the parental crosses was sown as head-rows with common bunt infection. Only lines that showed resistance to common bunt were used to create Pop.Sel. in generation F 4 . Afterwards the two populations were grown with and without inoculation with common bunt in order to i) select for bunt resistance and ii) to be able to compare the effect on diversity of this selection step. Preliminary results show a higher level of common bunt resistance in Pop.Sel in the first year. Single seed sorting for protein content Prior to sowing the F 5 seed of the population Pop.Sel, the seed were sorted individually for protein content using a BoMill IQ Grain Quality Sorter 1002S. The fraction of seeds containing the 10% highest and another fraction containing the 10% lowest protein content were selected. The four populations, Pop.No.Sel, Pop.Sel, and Pop.Sel.high. Protein and Pop.Sel.low.Protein and the parental lines were sown in a randomized complete block yield trial at two locations in Denmark in order to assess their yield and quality parameters such as protein content and baking quality of the parents and there derived populations. Results are expected in the summer 2013. Diversity of wheat composite cross populations. The practical question of “how much diversity is needed in populations?” has not been answered yet. BIOBREED will aim to to quantify the levels of diversity in wheat composite cross populations after the different selection steps i) cultivation with and without common bunt inoculum, and ii) sorting for single protein content. In a fist attempt SSR markers will be used to describe the influence these different selection pathways will have on the population diversity. 90 SSR markers—about two markers per chromosome arm—will be used to describe the initial genetic diversity of the 23 parental lines. F 6 seed of the different populations will be analysed with the same markers and population diversity after different selection pathways will be quantified

    How to Bootstrap Anonymous Communication

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    We ask whether it is possible to anonymously communicate a large amount of data using only public (non-anonymous) communication together with a small anonymous channel. We think this is a central question in the theory of anonymous communication and to the best of our knowledge this is the first formal study in this direction. To solve this problem, we introduce the concept of anonymous steganography: think of a leaker Lea who wants to leak a large document to Joe the journalist. Using anonymous steganography Lea can embed this document in innocent looking communication on some popular website (such as cat videos on YouTube or funny memes on 9GAG). Then Lea provides Joe with a short key kk which, when applied to the entire website, recovers the document while hiding the identity of Lea among the large number of users of the website. Our contributions include: - Introducing and formally defining anonymous steganography, - A construction showing that anonymous steganography is possible (which uses recent results in circuits obfuscation), - A lower bound on the number of bits which are needed to bootstrap anonymous communication.Comment: 15 page

    The role of regional information in the optimal composition of a committee

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    In this paper we present a model for the optimal composition of a federal or supra-national committee. The involvement of regional (national) entities in federal committees is typically motivated by their knowledge of regional information about the state of the economy. Using this argument we show that if the uncertainties regarding the state of the economy are not evenly distributed across the currency area, the optimal representation of regions in the federal committee increases with the overall uncertainty about their economic performance. Second, if certain parts of the economic area behave in a relatively synchronized way, it may not be necessary that all these regions are equally represented in the federal committee.Composition of a committee, currency union, optimal representation, information uncertainty
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