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Wiley, Robert Craig
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Botany and Plant Pathology
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Article
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- Creator:
- Wilson, Mark V., Clark, Deborah Louise, 1950-, and Roberts, R. E.
- Abstract:
- Questions: Are traits related to the performance of plant species in restoration? Are the relationships between traits and performance consistent across the functional groups of annual forbs, perennial forbs, and grasses? Do the relationships between traits and performance depend on neighboring functional groups? Location: A former agricultural field, being restored...
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- Article
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- Creator:
- Clark, Deborah Louise, 1950-, Wilson, Mark V., Roberts, Rachel, Dunwiddie, Peter W., Stanley, Amanda, and Kaye, Thomas N.
- Abstract:
- Question: Most results of restoration efforts are species-specific and/or site-specific and therefore are not general enough to be easily applied to other species and other sites. Our research addresses the issue of species-specific results by investigating the feasibility of using plant traits instead of taxonomic species to characterize species responses...
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- Article
- Full Text:
- Boyer, Tim Ennis, Irvin Banman, Andrew MacDougall, Robert Pelant, and the broader group of
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- Creator:
- Summers, Carly F., Gulliford, Colwyn M., Carlson, Craig H., Lillis, Jacquelyn A., Carlson, Maryn O., Cadle-Davidson, Lance, Gent, David H., and Smart, Christine D.
- Abstract:
- RNA sequencing (RNA-seq) and genotyping-by-sequencing (GBS) were used for single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) identification from two economically important obligate plant pathogens, Pseudoperonospora cubensis and P. humuli. Twenty isolates of P. cubensis and 19 isolates of P. humuli were genotyped using RNA-seq and GBS. Principle components analysis (PCA) of each data...
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- Article
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- M. Gulliford2, Craig H. Carlson3, Jacquelyn A. Lillis4, Maryn O. Carlson1, Lance Cadle-Davidson4
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- Creator:
- Condon, Bradford J., Leng, Yueqiang, Wu, Dongliang, Bushley, Kathryn E., Ohm, Robin A., Otillar, Robert, Martin, Joel, Schackwitz, Wendy, Grimwood, Jane, MohdZainudin, NurAinIzzati, Xue, Chunsheng, Wang, Rui, Manning, Viola A., Dhillon, Braham, Tu, Zheng Jin, Steffenson, Brian J., Salamov, Asaf, Sun, Hui, Lowry, Steve, LaButti, Kurt, Han, James, Copeland, Alex, Lindquist, Erika, Barry, Kerrie, Schmutz, Jeremy, Baker, Scott E., Ciuffetti, Lynda M., Grigoriev, Igor V., Zhong, Shaobin, and Turgeon, B. Gillian
- Abstract:
- The genomes of five Cochliobolus heterostrophus strains, two Cochliobolus sativus strains, three additional Cochliobolus species (Cochliobolus victoriae, Cochliobolus carbonum, Cochliobolus miyabeanus), and closely related Setosphaeria turcica were sequenced at the Joint Genome Institute (JGI). The datasets were used to identify SNPs between strains and species, unique genomic regions, core secondary...
- Resource Type:
- Article
- Full Text:
- ., Dongliang Wu1., Kathryn E. Bushley3, Robin A. Ohm4, Robert Otillar4, Joel Martin4, Wendy Schackwitz4, Jane
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- Creator:
- Deans, Andrew R., Lewis, Suzanna E., Huala, Eva, Anzaldo, Salvatore S., Ashburner, Michael, Balhoff, James P., Blackburn, David C., Blake, Judith A., Burleigh, J. Gordon, Chanet, Bruno, Cooper, Lauren D., Courtot, Mélanie, Csösz, Sándor, Cul, Hong, Dahdul, Wasila, Das, Sandip, Dececchi, T. Alexander, Dettal, Agnes, Diogo, Rui, Druzinsky, Robert E., Dumontier, Michel, Franz, Nico M., Friedrich, Frank, Gkoutos, George V., Haendel, Melissa, Harmon, Luke J., Hayamizu, Terry F., He, Yongqun, Hines, Heather M., Ibrahim, Nizar, Jackson, Laura M., Jaiswal, Pankaj, James-Zorn, Christina, Köhler, Sebastian, Lecointre, Guillaume, Lapp, Hilmar, Lawrence, Carolyn J., Le Novère, Nicolas, Lundberg, John G., Macklin, James, Mast, Austin R., Midford, Peter E., Mikó, István, Mungall, Christopher J., Oellrich, Anika, Osumi-Sutherland, David, Parkinson, Helen, Ramírez, Martín J., Richter, Stefan, Robinson, Peter N., Ruttenberg, Alan, Schulz, Katja S., Segerdell, Erik, Seltmann, Katja C., Sharkey, Michael J., Smith, Aaron D., Smith, Barry, Specht, Chelsea D., Squires, R. Burke, Thacker, Robert W., Thessen, Anne, Fernandez-Triana, Jose, Vihinen, Mauno, Vize, Peter D., Vogt, Lars, Wall, Christine E., Walls, Ramona L., Westerfeld, Monte, Wharton, Robert A., Wirkner, Christian S., Woolley, James B., Yoder, Matthew J., Zorn, Aaron M., and Mabee, Paula
- Abstract:
- Despite a large and multifaceted effort to understand the vast landscape of phenotypic data, their current form inhibits productive data analysis. The lack of a community-wide, consensus-based, human- and machine-interpretable language for describing phenotypes and their genomic and environmental contexts is perhaps the most pressing scientific bottleneck to integration across...
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- Article
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- , Robert E. Druzinsky19, Michel Dumontier20, Nico M. Franz5, Frank Friedrich21, George V. Gkoutos22
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- Creator:
- Gene Ontology Consortium, Berardini, Tanya Z., Li, Donghui, Huala, Eva, Bridges, Susan, Burgess, Shane, McCarthy, Fiona, Carbon, Seth, Lewis, Suzanna E., Mungall, Christopher J., Abdulla, Amina, Wood, Valerie, Feltrin, Erika, Valle, Giorgio, Chisholm, Rex L., Fey, Petra, Gaudet, Pascale, Kibbe, Warren, Basu, Siddhartha, Bushmanova, Yulia, Eilbeck, Karen, Siegele, Deborah A., McIntosh, Brenley, Renfro, Daniel, Zweifel, Adrienne, Hu, James C., Harris, Midori A., Deegan, Jennifer I., Ireland, Amelia, Lomax, Jane, Jaiswal, Pankaj, Chibucos, Marcus, Gwinn-Giglio, Michelle, Wortman, Jennifer, Hannick, Linda, Madupu, Ramana, Botstein, David, Dolinski, Kara, Livstone, Michael S., Oughtred, Rose, Blake, Judith A., Bult, Carol, Diehl, Alexander D., Dolan, Mary, Drabkin, Harold, Eppig, Janan T., Hill, David P., Ni, Li, Ringwald, Martin, Sitnikov, Dmitry, Collmer, Candace, Torto-Alalibo, Trudy, Laulederkind, Stan, Shimoyama, Mary, Twigger, Simon, D'Eustachio, Peter, Matthews, Lisa, Balakrishnan, Rama, Binkley, Gail, Cherry, J. Michael, Christie, Karen R., Costanzo, Maria C., Engel, Stacia R., Fisk, Dianna G., Hirschman, Jodi E., Hitz, Benjamin C., Hong, Eurie L., Krieger, Cynthia J., Miyasato, Stuart R., Nash, Robert S., Park, Julie, Skrzypek, Marek S., Weng, Shuai, Wong, Edith D., Aslett, Martin, Chan, Juancarlos, Kishore, Ranjana, Sternberg, Paul, Van Auken, Kimberly, Khodiyar, Varsha K., Lovering, Ruth C., and Talmud, Philippa J.
- Abstract:
- The Gene Ontology (GO) Consortium (http://www.geneontology.org) (GOC) continues to develop, maintain and use a set of structured, controlled vocabularies for the annotation of genes, gene products and sequences. The GO ontologies are expanding both in content and in structure. Several new relationship types have been introduced and used, along with...
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- Article
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- Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA); Linda Hannick, Ramana Madupu (The J. Craig Venter Institute, Rockville, MD
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- Creator:
- International Arabidopsis Informatics Consortium, Bastow, Ruth, Beynon, Jim, Brendel, Volker, Dooley, Rion, Friesner, Joanna, Grotewold, Erich, Huala, Eva, Loraine, Ann, Meyers, Blake, Pires, J. Chris, Provart, Nicholas, Stanzione, Dan, Town, Chris, and Ware, Doreen
- Abstract:
- The Arabidopsis Information Portal (AIP), a resource expected to provide access to all community data and combine outputs into a single user-friendly interface, has emerged from community discussions over the last 23 months. These discussions began during two closely linked workshops in early 2010 that established the International Arabidopsis Informatics...
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- Article
- Full Text:
- ; Lukas Mueller, Cornell University, United States; Robert Muller, TAIR, United States; Hans-Michael
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- Creator:
- Sherman, Jennifer and Gent, David H.
- Abstract:
- Impact and relevance are valued by both plant pathologists and the supporters of research and extension. Impact has been characterized as the “So what?” of research results, and in applied research in agriculture typically involves some change in human behavior. This might involve, for instance, avoidance of broad spectrum pesticides,...
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- Article
- Full Text:
- - plaining, “You know it was a step mostly for marketing.” Craig Lambert, whose medium-sized Washington farm
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- Creator:
- Gent, David H., Mahaffee, Walter F., McRoberts, Neil, and Pfender, William F.
- Abstract:
- Disease predictive systems are intended to be management aids. With a few exceptions, these systems typically do not have direct sustained use by growers. Rather, their impact is mostly pedagogic and indirect, improving recommendations from farm advisers and shaping management concepts. The degree to which a system is consulted depends...
- Resource Type:
- Article