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58 results on '"Rebetzke GJ"'

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1. Potential abiotic stress targets for modern genetic manipulation.

2. Seedling and field assessment of wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) dwarfing genes and their influence on root traits in multiple genetic backgrounds.

3. Genotypic variation and covariation in wheat seedling seminal root architecture and grain yield under field conditions.

4. Selection for early shoot vigour in wheat increases root hair length but reduces epidermal cell size of roots and leaves.

5. Phenotypic Evaluation and Genetic Analysis of Seedling Emergence in a Global Collection of Wheat Genotypes ( Triticum aestivum L.) Under Limited Water Availability.

6. Impact of Varying Light and Dew on Ground Cover Estimates from Active NDVI, RGB, and LiDAR.

7. A reduced-tillering trait shows small but important yield gains in dryland wheat production.

8. Ground-Based LiDAR Improves Phenotypic Repeatability of Above-Ground Biomass and Crop Growth Rate in Wheat.

9. Deeper roots associated with cooler canopies, higher normalized difference vegetation index, and greater yield in three wheat populations grown on stored soil water.

10. Wheat drought tolerance in the field is predicted by amino acid responses to glasshouse-imposed drought.

11. Increase in coleoptile length and establishment by Lcol-A1, a genetic locus with major effect in wheat.

12. Evaluation of the Phenotypic Repeatability of Canopy Temperature in Wheat Using Continuous-Terrestrial and Airborne Measurements.

13. Review: High-throughput phenotyping to enhance the use of crop genetic resources.

14. Modelling impact of early vigour on wheat yield in dryland regions.

15. Improving process-based crop models to better capture genotype×environment×management interactions.

16. Accounting for Genotype-by-Environment Interactions and Residual Genetic Variation in Genomic Selection for Water-Soluble Carbohydrate Concentration in Wheat.

17. High Throughput Determination of Plant Height, Ground Cover, and Above-Ground Biomass in Wheat with LiDAR.

18. Selection for water-soluble carbohydrate accumulation and investigation of genetic × environment interactions in an elite wheat breeding population.

19. Genome-Wide Associations for Water-Soluble Carbohydrate Concentration and Relative Maturity in Wheat Using SNP and DArT Marker Arrays.

20. Methodology for High-Throughput Field Phenotyping of Canopy Temperature Using Airborne Thermography.

21. Do wheat breeders have suitable genetic variation to overcome short coleoptiles and poor establishment in the warmer soils of future climates?

23. Dynamic quantification of canopy structure to characterize early plant vigour in wheat genotypes.

24. Rhizosheaths on wheat grown in acid soils: phosphorus acquisition efficiency and genetic control.

25. Awns reduce grain number to increase grain size and harvestable yield in irrigated and rainfed spring wheat.

26. A tillering inhibition gene influences root-shoot carbon partitioning and pattern of water use to improve wheat productivity in rainfed environments.

27. Early vigour improves phosphate uptake in wheat.

28. Of growing importance: combining greater early vigour and transpiration efficiency for wheat in variable rainfed environments.

29. The influence of shoot and root size on nitrogen uptake in wheat is affected by nitrate affinity in the roots during early growth.

30. "Rolled-upness": phenotyping leaf rolling in cereals using computer vision and functional data analysis approaches.

31. Variation in Adult Plant Phenotypes and Partitioning among Seed and Stem-Borne Roots across Brachypodium distachyon Accessions to Exploit in Breeding Cereals for Well-Watered and Drought Environments.

32. Recurrent selection for wider seedling leaves increases early biomass and leaf area in wheat (Triticum aestivum L.).

33. Integration of phenotyping and genetic platforms for a better understanding of wheat performance under drought.

34. Soil coring at multiple field environments can directly quantify variation in deep root traits to select wheat genotypes for breeding.

35. Wheat genotypes with high early vigour accumulate more nitrogen and have higher photosynthetic nitrogen use efficiency during early growth.

36. Plot size matters: interference from intergenotypic competition in plant phenotyping studies.

37. Use of a large multiparent wheat mapping population in genomic dissection of coleoptile and seedling growth.

38. Evaluation of reduced-tillering (tin) wheat lines in managed, terminal water deficit environments.

39. A rapid, controlled-environment seedling root screen for wheat correlates well with rooting depths at vegetative, but not reproductive, stages at two field sites.

40. Genotypic variation in the accumulation of water soluble carbohydrates in wheat.

41. Traits and selection strategies to improve root systems and water uptake in water-limited wheat crops.

42. Analysis of leaf and stripe rust severities reveals pathotype changes and multiple minor QTLs associated with resistance in an Avocet × Pastor wheat population.

43. A multisite managed environment facility for targeted trait and germplasm phenotyping.

44. Genomic regions for canopy temperature and their genetic association with stomatal conductance and grain yield in wheat.

45. Genetic control of duration of pre-anthesis phases in wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) and relationships to leaf appearance, tillering, and dry matter accumulation.

46. Large root systems: are they useful in adapting wheat to dry environments?

47. Simultaneous selection of major and minor genes: use of QTL to increase selection efficiency of coleoptile length of wheat (Triticum aestivum L.).

48. Quantitative trait loci for carbon isotope discrimination are repeatable across environments and wheat mapping populations.

49. Quantitative trait loci for slow-rusting resistance in wheat to leaf rust and stripe rust identified with multi-environment analysis.

50. Molecular mapping of genes for Coleoptile growth in bread wheat (Triticum aestivum L.).

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