Production of herbicide-resistant jointed goatgrass (Aegilops cylindrica) x wheat (Triticum aestivum) hybrids in the field by natural hybridization. Seefeldt, S., S., Zemetra, R., Young, F., L., & Jones, S., S. Weed Science, 46:632-634, 1998.
abstract   bibtex   
Imazamox-resistant hybrids resulted from a cross between jointed goatgrass and an imazamox-resistant wheat (cv. FS-4 IR wheat). Two imazamox-resistant hybrids were discovered in a research plot where FS-4 IR wheat seed had been replanted from the harvest of an imazamox efficacy study conducted the year before at a different location. These hybrid plants survived imazamox applied at 0.053 and 0.069 kg ai ha-1 in the field and produced seven viable seeds (BC1). This seed germinated, and chromosomes were counted from the roots (2N number ranged from 39 to 54). In the greenhouse, six of the seven plants survived an application of 0.072 hg ai ha-1 imazamox, which confirmed that the resistance trait had been passed to these progeny. A large amount of phenotypic variation was observed in the mature BC1 plants. A genetic description of the movement of the resistant gene is proposed based on the case of the gene being located on the D and the A or B genomes. Management strategies to reduce the occurrence of the herbicide-resistant hybrids are presented.
@article{
 title = {Production of herbicide-resistant jointed goatgrass (Aegilops cylindrica) x wheat (Triticum aestivum) hybrids in the field by natural hybridization},
 type = {article},
 year = {1998},
 keywords = {goatgrass,hybrids,wheat},
 pages = {632-634},
 volume = {46},
 id = {e7648316-b984-332b-92ca-02834e3ca8da},
 created = {2012-01-05T13:09:04.000Z},
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 profile_id = {1a467167-0a41-3583-a6a3-034c31031332},
 group_id = {0e532975-1a47-38a4-ace8-4fe5968bcd72},
 last_modified = {2012-01-05T13:14:58.000Z},
 tags = {Goatgrass},
 read = {false},
 starred = {false},
 authored = {false},
 confirmed = {true},
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 source_type = {Journal Article},
 abstract = {Imazamox-resistant hybrids resulted from a cross between jointed goatgrass and an imazamox-resistant wheat (cv. FS-4 IR wheat). Two imazamox-resistant hybrids were discovered in a research plot where FS-4 IR wheat seed had been replanted from the harvest of an imazamox efficacy study conducted the year before at a different location. These hybrid plants survived imazamox applied at 0.053 and 0.069 kg ai ha-1 in the field and produced seven viable seeds (BC1). This seed germinated, and chromosomes were counted from the roots (2N number ranged from 39 to 54). In the greenhouse, six of the seven plants survived an application of 0.072 hg ai ha-1 imazamox, which confirmed that the resistance trait had been passed to these progeny. A large amount of phenotypic variation was observed in the mature BC1 plants. A genetic description of the movement of the resistant gene is proposed based on the case of the gene being located on the D and the A or B genomes. Management strategies to reduce the occurrence of the herbicide-resistant hybrids are presented.},
 bibtype = {article},
 author = {Seefeldt, Steven S and Zemetra, Robert and Young, Frank L and Jones, Stephen S},
 journal = {Weed Science}
}

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