- Page 2 and 3:
Borlaug Global Rust Initiative
- Page 4 and 5:
© 2010, N.I. Vavilov Research Inst
- Page 6 and 7:
Koppel Reine, Ingver Anne Requireme
- Page 8 and 9:
A.V. Konarev, T.I.Peneva, N.K.Gubar
- Page 10 and 11:
Majed M.A Al-Bokari, Saad M. Alzahr
- Page 12 and 13:
Ratan Tiwari, Rajender Singh, Sindh
- Page 14 and 15:
Kadir Akan, Zafer Mert, Lütfi Çet
- Page 16 and 17:
Lapochkina I. F., Gajnullin N. R.,
- Page 18 and 19:
Victoria A. Valdez, Scott D. Haley,
- Page 20 and 21:
Ribas Vargas, G, Reynolds, M, De Si
- Page 22 and 23:
RM DePauw, RE Knox, JB Thomas, DG H
- Page 24 and 25:
Paramjit Khurana and Harsh Chauhan
- Page 26 and 27:
Vázquez, D.; Berger, A.; Cuniberti
- Page 28:
Sedláček Tibor Prediction of baki
- Page 31 and 32:
that some crops, such as wheat, oat
- Page 33:
ferent continents, Asia and Europe.
- Page 36 and 37:
A STRATegIC Look AT gLoBAL WheAT PR
- Page 38 and 39:
it would be logical to conclude tha
- Page 40 and 41:
• Rational retention of adequate
- Page 42 and 43:
STudy of RAIN effeCTS oN RAINfed WI
- Page 44 and 45:
amount of durum and carotenoid rich
- Page 46 and 47:
evaluation under farmers’ conditi
- Page 48 and 49:
The fACToRS effeCTINg The RegIoNAL
- Page 50 and 51:
AdoPTIoN of CoNSeRVATIoN AgRICuLTuR
- Page 52 and 53:
Severe disease attacks are not the
- Page 54 and 55:
Coefficients of variation (CV) of t
- Page 56 and 57:
humidity (67 and 80%) and occurrenc
- Page 58 and 59:
need to be qualitatively evaluated
- Page 60 and 61:
Strengthening the capacity of wheat
- Page 62 and 63:
CoNSeRVATIoN AgRICuLTuRe foR SuSTAI
- Page 64 and 65:
BReedINg WheAT foR ReduCed ImPACT o
- Page 66 and 67:
WheAT ImPRoVemeNT ChALLeNgeS ANd oP
- Page 69 and 70:
PLeNARy SeSSIoN 2: uTILIzATIoN of W
- Page 71 and 72:
uTILIzATIoN of NeW WheAT geNePooL I
- Page 73 and 74:
IdeNTIfICATIoN of SouRCeS of SeedLI
- Page 75 and 76:
CoNSeRVINg CRoP dIVeRSITy IN The 21
- Page 77 and 78:
Genetic analysis of leaf rust resis
- Page 79 and 80:
T.aestivum-H.villosa interstitial t
- Page 81 and 82:
Growing F2-F4 generations as bulks.
- Page 83 and 84:
ferences among accessions. Differen
- Page 85 and 86:
dIgITAL PhoTogRAPhy AS A NoN-deSTRu
- Page 87 and 88:
BReAd WheAT (TRITICum AeSTIVum, L)
- Page 89 and 90: eVALuATIoN ANd uTILIzATIoN of WheAT
- Page 91 and 92: TRANSLoCATIoNS IN INTRASPeCIfIC kAR
- Page 93 and 94: WheAT LANdRACeS ANd oBSoLeTe CuLTIV
- Page 95 and 96: TRANSfeR of WheAT STReAk moSAIC VIR
- Page 97 and 98: BReedINg fRee-ThReShABLe, dWARf emm
- Page 99 and 100: geNeTIC STRuCTuRe of AegILoPS TAuSC
- Page 101 and 102: PLANT geNeTIC ReSouRCeS IN CeNTRAL
- Page 103 and 104: uSe of TRITICeAe TRIBe SPeCIeS foR
- Page 105 and 106: moLeCuLAR mARkeRS foR INCReASINg ef
- Page 107 and 108: ChARACTeRISTICS of WheAT geNeTIC Re
- Page 109 and 110: moLeCuLAR-CyTogeNeTIC ChARACTeRIzAT
- Page 111 and 112: moLeCuLAR CyTogeNeTIC ChARACTeRIzAT
- Page 113 and 114: gRAIN yIeLd PeRfoRmANCe of SyNTheTI
- Page 115 and 116: ANALySIS of The PASSPoRT INfoRmATIo
- Page 117 and 118: INdIReCT SeLeCTIoN uSINg RefeReNCe
- Page 119 and 120: geNome ANALySeS of The ABoRIgINe LA
- Page 121 and 122: SImuLTANeouS ReSISTANCe To PoWdeRy
- Page 123 and 124: PheNoTyPIC dIVeRSITy IN SPANISh LAN
- Page 125 and 126: highly resistant to English grain a
- Page 127 and 128: SPANISh LANdRACeS of TRITICum TuRgI
- Page 129 and 130: No chromosome rearrangements were d
- Page 131 and 132: uTILIzATIoN of eLyTRIgIA INTeRmedIA
- Page 133 and 134: WheAT ImPRoVemeNT uSINg Rye - dISTu
- Page 135 and 136: WheAT-PSAThyRoSTAChyS huAShANICA Ch
- Page 137 and 138: Stagonospora nodorum blotch (Stagon
- Page 139: cific resistance to pyrenophorosis,
- Page 143 and 144: RooT mASS CoNTRIBuTIoNS ANd TRAde-o
- Page 145 and 146: while growth was unchanged for cv.
- Page 147 and 148: eNhANCINg WheAT fIeLd PeRfoRmANCe A
- Page 149 and 150: genes while plants with extremely h
- Page 151 and 152: All spring wheat varieties grown in
- Page 153 and 154: Ld50 ANd Ld100 of LoCAL WheAT LANdR
- Page 155 and 156: dRoughT STReSS ToLeRANCe IN CeReALS
- Page 157 and 158: AgRoNomIC PeRfoRmANCe of gA-ReSPoNS
- Page 159 and 160: INfLueNCe of TeRmINAL dRoughT STReS
- Page 161 and 162: PhySIoLogICAL ChARACTeRIzATIoN of h
- Page 163 and 164: Literature Ma J.F., Taketa S., Yang
- Page 165 and 166: SeLeCTIoN of BReAd WheAT geNoTyPeS
- Page 167 and 168: geNeTIC gAIN eSTImATe of fIeLd dRou
- Page 169 and 170: ToLeRANCe To IoN ToxICITIeS (AL, mN
- Page 171 and 172: duRum: PARTICIPAToRy BReedINg foR A
- Page 173 and 174: BReedINg, PhySIoLogICAL ANd moLeCuL
- Page 175 and 176: qTL ASSoCIATed WITh heAT SuSCePTIBI
- Page 177 and 178: gge-BIPLoT ANALySIS of RAIN-fed duR
- Page 179 and 180: effeCTS of PRogReSSIVe WATeR STReSS
- Page 181 and 182: WheAT STudIeS IN ANAToLIAN RegIoN o
- Page 183 and 184: NeW WINTeR WheAT VARIeTIeS foR RAIN
- Page 185 and 186: quANTITATIVe ANALySIS of PRoTeome I
- Page 187 and 188: meThodS of WINTeR hARdINeSS TeSTS I
- Page 189 and 190: ChANgeS IN The PATTeRN of AdAPTATIo
- Page 191 and 192:
mination temperatures varied among
- Page 193 and 194:
The ReLATIoNShIPS AmoNg The VeRNALI
- Page 195 and 196:
effeCTS of ABIoTIC STReSS oN gRAIN
- Page 197 and 198:
moLeCuLAR ChARACTeRIzATIoN of TeRmI
- Page 199 and 200:
The accessions Gamdow-6; Lakata-1;
- Page 201 and 202:
effeCTS of SALINITy ANd NITRogeN uS
- Page 203 and 204:
were 10-15% more yielding than aver
- Page 205 and 206:
PLeNARy SeSSIoN 4: WheAT geNeTICS A
- Page 207 and 208:
genes, of which some are already pr
- Page 209 and 210:
BReedINg foR ReSISTANCe To TAN SPoT
- Page 211 and 212:
1%-72% and from 3%-55% in Germany a
- Page 213 and 214:
Four to five open Petri dishes were
- Page 215 and 216:
the feasibility of enhancing CR res
- Page 217 and 218:
The conclusion from this study is t
- Page 219 and 220:
To be able to produce high-quality
- Page 221 and 222:
markers indicates the absence of th
- Page 223 and 224:
deVeLoPINg of NeW WheAT CuLTIVAR Re
- Page 225 and 226:
ReSISTANCe To LeAf RuST IN duRum Wh
- Page 227 and 228:
WheAT VIRuSeS: A muLTI-PLex PCR meT
- Page 229 and 230:
PReSeNT STATuS of SuNN PeST (euRygA
- Page 231 and 232:
PhyTo-PAThoLogICAL ASSeSSmeNT of Ne
- Page 233 and 234:
mAPPINg of ug99 effeCTIVe STem RuST
- Page 235 and 236:
More than 1000 wheat genotypes from
- Page 237 and 238:
ChRomoSome LoCALIzATIoN of SPeCIfIC
- Page 239 and 240:
ReSISTANCe To SePToRIA TRITICI BLoT
- Page 241 and 242:
mAPPINg quANTITATIVe TRAIT LoCI IN
- Page 243 and 244:
ReSISTANCe To fuSARIum heAd BLIghT
- Page 245 and 246:
sources is necessary. To solve this
- Page 247 and 248:
SuNN PeST ToLeRANCe of CeNTRAL ANAT
- Page 249 and 250:
WheAT BLAST CAuSed By mAgANAPoRThe
- Page 251 and 252:
moNIToRINg ANd eVALuATIoN of yeLLoW
- Page 253 and 254:
PeRfoRmANCe of ug99 ReSISTANT CImmy
- Page 255 and 256:
STudIeS oN ImPRoVINg The fuSARIum h
- Page 257 and 258:
RuST ReSISTANCe ANd The uS WheAT ge
- Page 259 and 260:
DNA. It ranged from 2.1 to 66.7 pg/
- Page 261 and 262:
Volga regions to 54% in the Noth Ca
- Page 263 and 264:
yR46: A NeW AduLT PLANT STRIPe RuST
- Page 265 and 266:
esistant donor line Frontana. F 1 p
- Page 267 and 268:
geNeTIC ANALySIS of ReSISTANCe To L
- Page 269 and 270:
Wheat/Fusarium. No major changes in
- Page 271 and 272:
BReedINg foR heSSIAN fLy ReSISTANCe
- Page 273 and 274:
deVeLoPmeNT of hIghLy ReSISTANT Whe
- Page 275 and 276:
PyRICuLARIA BLAST - A ThReAT To Whe
- Page 277 and 278:
Seedlings of 170 winter wheat culti
- Page 279 and 280:
GHPs have been purified, by affinit
- Page 281 and 282:
STRuCTuRe of PoPuLATIoNS of PuCCINI
- Page 283 and 284:
esistance genes, such as Lr16+ (141
- Page 285 and 286:
anged from 31.3 to 50.1, 43.9 to 60
- Page 287 and 288:
dIffeReNTIAL exPReSSIoN of PARTIAL
- Page 289 and 290:
deVeLoPINg RuSSIAN WheAT APhId (dIu
- Page 291 and 292:
ComPARATIVe ANALySIS of ThATCheR Ne
- Page 293 and 294:
as the number of FHB-diseased spike
- Page 295 and 296:
Study is financed by TÜBİTAK 1001
- Page 297 and 298:
The results of these studies indica
- Page 299 and 300:
175 isolates were identified for vi
- Page 301 and 302:
ReSISTANCe To TTkSk IN duRum WheAT
- Page 303 and 304:
A CRITICAL ANALySIS of The AddITIVI
- Page 305 and 306:
eSTImATIoN of The CoST-effeCTIVeNeS
- Page 307 and 308:
ISoLATIoN of dIffeReNT WheAT-Rye TR
- Page 309 and 310:
geNeTIC dIVeRSITy of The fuNgAL Whe
- Page 311 and 312:
SLoW RuSTINg ReSISTANCe IN INdIAN W
- Page 313 and 314:
ePIdemIC ReSISTANCe To dISeASe ComP
- Page 315 and 316:
The situation for fusarium head bli
- Page 317 and 318:
STATuS of RuST ReSISTANCe IN WheAT
- Page 319 and 320:
SCReeNINg ANd BReedINg foR WheAT ST
- Page 321 and 322:
mARkeR-ASSISTed BACkCRoSS BReedINg
- Page 323 and 324:
INVoLVemeNT of (1 3,1 4)- -gLuCANAS
- Page 325 and 326:
flour and bread. It is caused by th
- Page 327 and 328:
VIRuLeNCe of The WheAT PoWdeRy mILd
- Page 329 and 330:
The BIoLogy ANd ePIdemIoLogy of STR
- Page 331 and 332:
SNP primer pairs for polymorphisms
- Page 333 and 334:
deTeCTIoN ANd dISTRIBuTIoN of RuST
- Page 335 and 336:
eleased, while a number of them are
- Page 337 and 338:
qTL mAPPINg of STem RuST ReSISTANCe
- Page 339 and 340:
PLeNARy SeSSIoN 5: WheAT BReedINg f
- Page 341 and 342:
new approaches for grain number and
- Page 343 and 344:
esponse pathways. Collectively, a m
- Page 345 and 346:
at anthesis and survival of floret
- Page 347 and 348:
The accumulation of RN at anthesis,
- Page 349 and 350:
Achievements made through technolog
- Page 351 and 352:
The PhySIoLogICAL BASIS of The geNe
- Page 353 and 354:
NITRogeN AVAILABILITy IN PRe ANd Po
- Page 355 and 356:
geRmPLASm deVeLoPmeNT IN WheAT PRe-
- Page 357 and 358:
gRAIN yIeLd ANd STABILITy of The Ne
- Page 359 and 360:
We have also developed guard-variet
- Page 361 and 362:
NITRogeN x SuLfuR feRTILIzATIoN ANd
- Page 363 and 364:
geNeTIC ImPRoVemeNT effeCTS oN yIeL
- Page 365 and 366:
wheat cultivars from China and some
- Page 367 and 368:
cultivars at all locations, some of
- Page 369 and 370:
sh, Almira, Jamin, Zubkov, Zagadka,
- Page 371 and 372:
(Leica MZ 6, Leica Microscopy Syste
- Page 373 and 374:
DM at anthesis), i.e. increased cha
- Page 375 and 376:
NupE and NUE at low N in both years
- Page 377 and 378:
ImPRoVemeNT of yIeLd ANd yIeLd ComP
- Page 379 and 380:
Nitrogen use efficiency: Nitrogen a
- Page 381 and 382:
STudy oN The effeCTS of The geNoTyP
- Page 383 and 384:
with the breeding lines, the three
- Page 385 and 386:
PANTeRA - INIA CLeARfIeLd ® , A hI
- Page 387 and 388:
of extremely low intensity and shor
- Page 389 and 390:
geNeTIC ReSPoNSe of WINTeR ANd fACu
- Page 391 and 392:
From 1999 to 2004, the GTZ-CIMMYT P
- Page 393 and 394:
Canopy temperature (CT) ranged betw
- Page 395 and 396:
performants than the parents of the
- Page 397 and 398:
weight of 1000 grains allow receivi
- Page 399 and 400:
ImPACT of The 1BL.1RS ChRomoSome TR
- Page 401 and 402:
WheAT BReedINg STRATegy IN BANgLAde
- Page 403 and 404:
exPeCTed ReSPoNSe To SeLeCTIoN foR
- Page 405 and 406:
gxe INTeRACTIoN effeCTS oN gRAIN yI
- Page 407 and 408:
BAm - A NeW hIgh quALITy ANd STem R
- Page 409 and 410:
The AdAPTIVe PoTeNTIAL IN ukRAINe o
- Page 411 and 412:
WINTeR WheAT BReedINg ANd SuPeR Whe
- Page 413 and 414:
PhoSPhoeNoLPyRuVATe CARBoxyLASe ACT
- Page 415 and 416:
PLeNARy SeSSIoN 6: BIoTeChNoLogICAL
- Page 417 and 418:
The development of genome-wide set
- Page 419 and 420:
‘oVeRgRoWTh’ muTANTS of WheAT:
- Page 421 and 422:
The INTeRNATIoNAL WheAT geNome Sequ
- Page 423 and 424:
INTegRATINg moLeCuLAR TeChNoLogy IN
- Page 425 and 426:
The VARIATIoN of SSR PRofILeS IN BR
- Page 427 and 428:
The uSe of PedIgRee, moLeCuLAR mARk
- Page 429 and 430:
2A with mixture of DArT markers pre
- Page 431 and 432:
moLeCuLAR-geNeTIC ANALySIS of ukRAI
- Page 433 and 434:
the genome. Minor loci determining
- Page 435 and 436:
Total cost of our molecular work ha
- Page 437 and 438:
geNeTIC dIVeRSITy of CRoATIAN WheAT
- Page 439 and 440:
mAPPINg geNomIC RegIoNS foR gRAIN y
- Page 441 and 442:
ChARACTeRISATIoN of The gRAIN SPeCI
- Page 443 and 444:
CLoNINg ANd mAPPINg of CANdIdATe ge
- Page 445 and 446:
quANTITATIVe TRAIT LoCI CoNTRoLLINg
- Page 447 and 448:
The RoLe of hdzIPI TRANSCRIPTIoN fA
- Page 449 and 450:
A ComPARATIVe ASSeSSmeNT of geNeTIC
- Page 451 and 452:
fLAVoNoId BIoSyNTheSIS geNeS IN Whe
- Page 453 and 454:
IdeNTIfICATIoN ANd ChARACTeRIzATIoN
- Page 455 and 456:
hoW To VALIdATe PoTeNTIALLy uSefuL
- Page 457 and 458:
ACCumuLATIoN RATeS of fAVoRABLe yIe
- Page 459 and 460:
AN effeCTIVe APPRoACh foR CoNSeNSuS
- Page 461 and 462:
(Afa family, pSc119.2, pTa71). The
- Page 463 and 464:
electrophoretic lectins and lipoxyg
- Page 465 and 466:
environment were observed in yield.
- Page 467 and 468:
ImPRoVINg The fRequeNCy of gReeN PL
- Page 469 and 470:
eVALuATIoN of TRANSfoRmed WheAT LIN
- Page 471 and 472:
that all the lines containing QLr.i
- Page 473 and 474:
PRoduCTIoN of WheAT hIgh AmyLoSe ST
- Page 475 and 476:
dIffeReNTIATIoN of WheAT geRmPLASm
- Page 477 and 478:
The APPLICATIoN of muLTIPLex PoLyme
- Page 479 and 480:
A PANeL of SNP-BASed ReAL-TIme PCR
- Page 481 and 482:
PRoBLemS ShouLd Be PAId ATTeNTIoN I
- Page 483 and 484:
ASSoCIATIoN mAPPINg IN WheAT Tobias
- Page 485 and 486:
IdeNTIfICATIoN of ChRomoSomAL RegIo
- Page 487 and 488:
PLeNARy SeSSIoN 7: WheAT geNeTICS A
- Page 489 and 490:
A similar approach was carried out
- Page 491 and 492:
c. Marketing Specialist: effectivel
- Page 493 and 494:
AChIeVemeNTS ANd NeW geNeTIC ASPeCT
- Page 495 and 496:
geNoTyPe ANd eNVIRoNmeNT effeCTS oN
- Page 497 and 498:
The gRAIN C:N RATIo AS AN eARLy deT
- Page 499 and 500:
WheAT gRAIN quALITy BReedINg: TeChN
- Page 501 and 502:
gRAIN hARdNeSS of WINTeR WheAT ANd
- Page 503 and 504:
moRPhoLogICAL ChARACTeRIzATIoN ANd
- Page 505 and 506:
geNoTyPe x eNVIRoNmeNT INTeRACTIoN
- Page 507 and 508:
The correlation factor between Fe a
- Page 509 and 510:
prove the industrial quality. Actua
- Page 511 and 512:
of this work and further validation
- Page 513 and 514:
PRedICTINg CookIe WheAT geRmPLASm P
- Page 515 and 516:
SIgNIfICANT effeCTS IN BReAd mAkINg
- Page 517 and 518:
ASSeSSmeNT of hIgh moLeCuLAR WeIghT
- Page 519 and 520:
eNd uSe quALITy ASSeSSmeNT of SyNTh
- Page 521 and 522:
geNeTIC PRogReSS IN WheAT quALITy A
- Page 523 and 524:
PRoTeIN ComPoSITIoN of TAJIk WheAT
- Page 525 and 526:
The NeW mICRoeLemeNT RICh PuRPLe-gR
- Page 527 and 528:
VARIABILITy IN gRAIN quALITy ChARAC
- Page 529 and 530:
uSINg The ReomIxeR foR TeSTINg BReA
- Page 531 and 532:
SodIum dodeCyL SuLfATe SedImeNTATIo
- Page 533 and 534:
irrigation in Ciudad Obregon, Sonor
- Page 535 and 536:
Results In intensive technology the
- Page 537 and 538:
es of beta-tocotrienol (15.58-31.31
- Page 539 and 540:
for SDS were identified mainly on 1
- Page 541 and 542:
fRequeNCIeS of SToRAge PRoTeIN ALLe
- Page 543 and 544:
PheNoLIC ACId CoNTeNT IN gRAINS of
- Page 545 and 546:
gRAIN quALITy of SPRINg WheAT CuLTI
- Page 547 and 548:
ReLATIoNShIPS BeTWeeN gRAIN hARdINe
- Page 549 and 550:
A ComPARISoN of gRAIN PRoTeIN CoNTe
- Page 551 and 552:
PATTeRNS of SyNTheSIS, dePoSITIoN A
- Page 553 and 554:
geNeTIC mAPPINg of A qTL CoNTRoLLIN
- Page 555 and 556:
quANTITATIVe TRAIT LoCI INfLueNCINg
- Page 557 and 558:
F5 head-rows of were also planted i
- Page 559 and 560:
ChARACTeRIzATIoN of hIgh- ANd LoW-m
- Page 561 and 562:
8th INTERNATIONAL WHEAT CONFERENCE
- Page 563 and 564:
CONTENTS Plenary Session 3 M. Mogha
- Page 565 and 566:
LINKAGE DISEQUILIBRIUM AND ASSOCIAT
- Page 567 and 568:
GENETIC STUDY ON THE EFFICIENCY OF
- Page 569 and 570:
and (3) increasing sample size from