Breeding Forage Plants in the Genome Era
Land & Water Australia. 2008. Breeding Forage Plants in the Genome Era. [Online] (Updated June 8th, 2008)
Available at: http://lwa.gov.au/node/2193 [Accessed Tuesday 26th of April 2011 02:28:11 AM ].
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Forage plant breeding has been largely based on phenotypic selection following sexual recombination of natural genetic variation found between and within ecotypes. Advances in plant genetic manipulation over the last 15 years have provided convincing evidence that these powerful technologies can complement and enhance plant breeding programs.
Significant progress in the establishment of the methodologies required for the molecular breeding of forage plants has been made. Examples of current products and approaches for the application of these methodologies to forage grass and legume improvement are outlined.
Large-scale genomic analysis of many organisms is under way with human, arabidopsis and rice genome sequences almost completed. Forage plant breeding is just now entering the genome era.
The plethora of new technologies and tools now available for high-throughput gene discovery and genome-wide gene expression analysis have opened up opportunities for innovative applications in the identification, functional characterisation and use of genes of value in forage production systems and beyond. Examples of these opportunities, such as ‘molecular phenotyping’, ‘symbio-genomics’ and ‘xeno-genomics’ are introduced.
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Author(s):A Lidgett, EK Ong, G Spangenberg, R Kalla, T Sawbridge, U John
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Keywords
- Gene Technology (1)
- Transgenic Plants (1)
- Gene Discovery (1)
- Expressed Sequence Tags (1)
- Microarray Technology (1)
- Forage Legumes (1)
Geo
- National (570)
Project
This publication is not attached to any projects.