3,167 research outputs found
Introgression Breeding for Improvement of Winter Hardiness in \u3cem\u3eLolium /Festuca\u3c/em\u3e Complex Using Androgenenesis
Intergeneric hybrids between closely related Lolium and Festuca species are used to broaden the gene pool and provide plant breeders with options to combine complementary traits to develop robust but high quality grass varieties. Androgenesis was found to be an effective procedure for selecting Lolium-Festuca genotypes comprising gene combinations rarely or never recovered by conventional backcross breeding programs. Here we describe the optimisation of androgenesis in Lolium perenne x Festuca pratensis. The male fertility and freezing tolerance of the Festulolium microspore-derived progenies were analysed and these progenies were also analysed by using genomic in situ hybridisation (GISH). The object of this study is to initiate introgression breeding for the improvement of winter hardiness in Lolium /Festuca complex
Introgression Breeding for Improvement of Winter Hardiness in \u3cem\u3eLolium /Festuca\u3c/em\u3e Complex Using Androgenenesis
Intergeneric hybrids between closely related Lolium and Festuca species are used to broaden the gene pool and provide plant breeders with options to combine complementary traits to develop robust but high quality grass varieties. Androgenesis was found to be an effective procedure for selecting Lolium-Festuca genotypes comprising gene combinations rarely or never recovered by conventional backcross breeding programs. Here we describe the optimisation of androgenesis in Lolium perenne x Festuca pratensis. The male fertility and freezing tolerance of the Festulolium microspore-derived progenies were analysed and these progenies were also analysed by using genomic in situ hybridisation (GISH). The object of this study is to initiate introgression breeding for the improvement of winter hardiness in Lolium /Festuca complex
Disorder-induced topological change of the superconducting gap structure in iron pnictides
In superconductors with unconventional pairing mechanisms, the energy gap in
the excitation spectrum often has nodes, which allow quasiparticle excitations
at low energies. In many cases, e.g. -wave cuprate superconductors, the
position and topology of nodes are imposed by the symmetry, and thus the
presence of gapless excitations is protected against disorder. Here we report
on the observation of distinct changes in the gap structure of iron-pnictide
superconductors with increasing impurity scattering. By the successive
introduction of nonmagnetic point defects into BaFe(AsP)
crystals via electron irradiation, we find from the low-temperature penetration
depth measurements that the nodal state changes to a nodeless state with fully
gapped excitations. Moreover, under further irradiation the gapped state
evolves into another gapless state, providing bulk evidence of unconventional
sign-changing -wave superconductivity. This demonstrates that the topology
of the superconducting gap can be controlled by disorder, which is a strikingly
unique feature of iron pnictides.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
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