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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Theoretical and applied genetics 94 (1997), S. 241-248 
    ISSN: 1432-2242
    Keywords: Key words Potato dihaploids ; Principal component analysis ; Dihaploid induction ; Microsatellite ; Isozyme analysis
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract A number of recent studies have provided evidence that potato dihaploids (S. tuberosum) contain and express DNA from the male (dihaploid inducer) parent, S. phureja. The importance of this for breeding programmes that use dihaploid potatoes is to some extent dependent upon whether the S. phureja DNA influences dihaploid morphology. In the present study, 21 characters were used to compare the morphology of six dihaploids with those of their parents: S. tuberosum (cvs `Pentland Dell' and `Pentland Crown') and S. phureja (IVP48). Characteristics of S. phureja were found in all of the dihaploids examined. In principal component analyses, dihaploids formed intermediate groupings positioned between those of the parents, although much closer to S. tuberosum. It is concluded there is evidence that DNA originating from the dihaploid inducer can affect the morphology of potato dihaploids. Implications of the findings are discussed.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Theoretical and applied genetics 98 (1999), S. 1125-1131 
    ISSN: 1432-2242
    Keywords: Key words Lupin ; Lupinus albus ; Germplasm collection ; ISSR-PCR ; Microsatellite ; Genebank
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract  The value of molecular biology for monitoring the genetic status of germplasm collections is subject to practical limitations. The large number and variability of accessions held usually dictates the approach that can be employed. A quick, simple but reliable molecular protocol must be combined with an appropriate strategy for handling large sample sizes. In this study, ISSR-PCR was used to reveal genetic variability within and between accessions held in a collection of lupin germplasm. Pooling of DNA from individuals within accessions was found to be the most appropriate strategy for assessing large quantities of plant material. Band profiles generated from pools containing five individuals were fully representative of all constituent individuals used in the mix. Pools comprising 10 or 20 individuals, however, sometimes failed to contain minor bands that had been present only in the profile of one individual. Variation was observed between pools containing five different genotypes from the same accession. Routine large-scale screens are required to assess the genetic diversity and homogeneity of the lupin germplasm collection held in Reading. It is concluded that 2–3 pools of five genotypes may be sufficient to represent the genetic variability within and between accessions in the lupin and similar collections.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: Imagery and MOLA data were used in an analysis of the ridge-forming rock unit (RFU) exposed in Sinus Meridiani (SM). This unit shows parallels at different scales with fluvial sedimentary bodies. We propose the terrestrial megafan as the prime analog for the RFU, and likely for other members of the layered units. Megafans are partial cones of fluvial sediment, with radii up to hundreds of km. Although recent reviews of hypotheses for the RFU units exclude fluvial hypotheses [1], inverted ridges in the deserts of Oman have been suggested as putative analogs for some ridges [2], apparently without appreciating The wider context in which these ridges have formed is a series of megafans [3], a relatively unappreciated geomorphic feature. It has been argued that these units conform to the megafan model at the regional, subregional and local scales [4]. At the regional scale suites of terrestrial megafans are known to cover large areas at the foot of uplands on all continents - a close parallel with the setting of the Meridiani sediments at the foot of the southern uplands of Mars, with its incised fluvial systems leading down the regional NW slope [2, 3] towards the sedimentary units. At the subregional scale the layering and internal discontinuities of the Meridiani rocks are consistent, inter alia, with stacked fluvial units [4]. Although poorly recognized as such, the prime geomorphic environment in which stream channel networks cover large areas, without intervening hillslopes, is the megafan [see e.g. 4]. Single megafans can reach 200,000 km2 [5]. Megafans thus supply an analog for areas where channel-like ridges (as a palimpsest of a prior landscape) cover the intercrater plains of Meridiani [6]. At the local, or river-reach scale, the numerous sinuous features of the RFU are suggestive of fluvial channels. Cross-cutting relationships, a common feature of channels on terrestrial megafans, are ubiquitous. Desert megafans show cemented paleo-channels as inverted topography [4] with all these characteristics.
    Keywords: Geophysics
    Type: JSC-CN-28378 , 44th Lunar and Planetary Science Conference; Mar 18, 2013 - Mar 22, 2013; The Woodlands, TX; United States
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: Views of African sedimentary basins from the International Space Station (ISS) is presented. The images from ISS include: 1) Inland deltas; 2) Prediction; 3) Significance; 4) Exploration applications; and 5) Coastal megafans
    Keywords: Geophysics
    Type: 4th Annual African Petroleum Forum; Mar 28, 2007 - Mar 29, 2007; Mayfair, London; United Kingdom
    Format: application/pdf
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2019-07-19
    Description: Megafans are a really extensive continental sediment bodies, fluvially derived, and fan-shaped in planform. Only those 〉80 km long were included in this study. Africa's megafans were mapped for purposes of both comprehensive geomorphic description and as a method of mapping by remote sensing large probable fluvial sediment bodies (we exclude sediment bodies deposited in well defined, modern floodplains and coastal deltas). Our criteria included a length dimension of 〉80 km and maximum width 〉40 km, partial cone morphology, and a radial drainage pattern. Visible and especially IR imagery were used to identify the features, combined with topographic SRTM data. We identified 99 megafans most of which are unstudied thus far. Their feeder rivers responsible for depositing megafan sediments rise on, and are consequent drainages oriented down the slopes of the swells that have dominated African landscapes since approximately 34 Ma (the high points in Africa's so-called basin-and-swell topography [1]). Most megafans (66%) have developed along these consequent rivers relatively near the swell cores, oriented radially away from the swells. The vast basins between the swells provide accommodation for megafan sediment wedges. Although clearly visible remotely, most megafans are inactive as a result of incision by the feeder river (which then no longer operates on the fan surface). Two tectonic settings control the location of Africa's megafans, 66% on swell flanks, and 33% related to rifts. (i) Swell flanks Most megafans are apexed relatively near the core of the parent swell, and are often clustered in groups: e.g., six on the west and north flanks of the Hoggar Swell (Algeria), seven on the north and south flanks of the Tibesti Swell (Libya-Chad borderlands), twelve on the west flank of the Ethiopian Swell, four on the east flank of the East African Swell (Kenya), Africa's largest, and eight around Angola's Bi Swell (western Zambia, northern Namibia). A cluster of possible fans lies on the western margin of the Congo Basin (Mayombe Swell), and on the coastal slopes of the Namibia Swell. Sheer size may have militated aginst the recognition of many megafans: the largest in the Sahara are the Teghahart (378 km, Hoggar Swell, Algeria), and the Wadi Albalata (340 km, Uweinat Swell, Egypt). In southern Africa the largest are the Cubango (320 km, Bi Swell, Angola/ Namibia), and the Limpopo (230 km, Mozambique). (ii) Rift zones (a) Steer's horns basins-wide depressions centered on rifts. The largest contiguous group (n=14) developed in a steer's-horns basin occupies the wide Muglad depression (200-350 km, South Sudan). Four rift-related megafans lie SE of Lake Chad (Chad). Nine megafans occupy the complex Anza Rift in Kenya/South Somalia. The Salamat megafan (Chad), is unusual because it oriented parallel with the linked Salamat, Doseo and Doba rift axes, and is consequently one of the longest in Africa (465 km). (b) Rift depressions sensu stricto. Most rifts are too narrow to provide a transverse dimension large enough to accommodate megafans. Although well-known, the Okavango Rift (NW Botswana, NE Namibia) is unique in Africa in hosting three megafans within identifiable faulted margins. The Nile megafan is Africa's largest (476 km) and comprises the vast Sudd wetland (South Sudan). An explanation for its remarkable size may be its location in a depression at the junction of two conducive tectonic zones, the East African Swell margin and the Muglad steer's-horns depression. Discharge of the River Nile, the largest in the region, has allowed the Nile megafan to outcompete neighboring megafans for space.
    Keywords: Geophysics
    Type: JSC-CN-36901 , International Geological Congress (IGC); Aug 27, 2016 - Sep 04, 2016; Cape Town; South Africa
    Format: application/pdf
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