Advances in haploid production in higher plants /

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Bibliographic Details
Meeting name:International Symposium on Haploidy in Higher Plants (3rd : 2006 : Vienna, Austria)
Imprint:Dordrecht ; London : Springer, 2008.
Description:1 online resource.
Language:English
Subject:
Format: E-Resource Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/11957828
Hidden Bibliographic Details
Other authors / contributors:Touraev, Alisher.
Forster, Brian P.
Jain, S. Mohan.
ISBN:9781402088544
140208854X
Notes:Selected conference papers.
Description based on print version record.
Summary:Based on the international symposium on 'Haploidy in Higher Plants III', (Vienna 2006), this book includes contributions that provide a rounded view of activities.
Other form:Print version: International Symposium on Haploidy in Higher Plants (3rd : 2006 : Vienna, Austria). Advances in haploid production in higher plants. Dordrecht ; London : Springer, 2008 9781402088537 1402088531
Description
Summary:The importance of haploids is well known to geneticists and plant breeders. The discovery of anther-derived haploid Datura plants in 1964 initiated great excitement in the plant breeding and genetics communities as it offered shortcuts in producing highly desirable homozygous plants. Unfortunately, the expected revolution was slow to materialise due to problems in extending methods to other species, including genotypic dependence, recalcitrance, slow development of tissue culture technologies and a lack of knowledge of the underlying processes. Recent years have witnessed great strides in the research and application of haploids in higher plants. After a lull in activities, drivers for the resurgence have been: (1) development of effective tissue culture protocols, (2) identification of genes c- trolling embryogenesis, and (3) large scale and wide spread commercial up-take in plant breeding and plant biotechnology arenas. The first major international symposium on "Haploids in Higher Plants" took place in Guelph, Canada in 1974. At that time there was much excitement about the potential benefits, but in his opening address Sir Ralph Riley offered the following words of caution: "I believe that it is quite likely that haploid research will contr- ute cultivars to agriculture in several crops in the future. However, the more extreme claims of the enthusiasts for haploid breeding must be treated with proper caution. Plant breeding is subject from time to time to sweeping claims from ent- siastic proponents of new procedures.
Item Description:Selected conference papers.
Physical Description:1 online resource.
ISBN:9781402088544
140208854X