All Stories

  1. Sympatric genetic divergence between early‐ and late‐season weedy rice populations
  2. Enhanced genetic diversity of weedy rice populations associated with latitude decreases revealed by simple sequence repeat fingerprints
  3. Persistence of transgenes in wild rice populations depends on the interaction between genetic background of recipients and environmental conditions
  4. Increased novel single nucleotide polymorphisms in weedy rice populations associated with the change of farming styles: Implications in adaptive mutation and evolution
  5. Fitness correlates of crop transgene flow into weedy populations: a case study of weedy rice in China and other examples
  6. Ambient insect pressure and recipient genotypes determine fecundity of transgenic crop‐weed rice hybrid progeny: Implications for environmental biosafety assessment
  7. Genetic divergence of weedy rice populations associated with their geographic location and coexisting conspecific crop: Implications on adaptive evolution of agricultural weeds
  8. World food security and the tribe Triticeae (Poaceae): Genetic resources of cultivated, wild, and weedy taxa for crop improvement
  9. Biosystematics and evolutionary relationships of perennial Triticeae species revealed by genomic analyses
  10. Segregation distortion affected by transgenes in early generations of rice crop-weed hybrid progeny: Implications for assessing potential evolutionary impacts from transgene flow into wild relatives
  11. Balance between a Higher Degree of Heterosis and Increased Reproductive Isolation: A Strategic Design for Breeding Inter-Subspecific Hybrid Rice
  12. Scientific data published by a peer‐reviewed journal should be properly interpreted: a reply to the letter by Gressel et al. (2014)
  13. Using a single transgenic event to infer fitness effects in crop–weed hybrids: a reply to the Letter by Grunewald & Bury (2014)
  14. High level of variation among Sri Lankan weedy rice populations, as estimated by morphological characterization
  15. Genetic and evolutionary effects of hybridization-introgression and their implications for conservation of crop wild relative species
  16. A novel 5‐enolpyruvoylshikimate‐3‐phosphate ( EPSP ) synthase transgene for glyphosate resistance stimulates growth and fecundity in weedy rice ( O ryza sativa ) ...
  17. A comparative study of competitiveness between different genotypes of weedy rice (Oryza sativa ) and cultivated rice
  18. Population clonal diversity and fine-scale genetic structure in Oryza officinalis (Poaceae) from China, implications for in situ conservation
  19. Rational Design of Catechol-2, 3-dioxygenase for Improving the Enzyme Characteristics
  20. Relationships of Aegilops tauschii revealed by DNA fingerprints: The evidence for agriculture exchange between China and the West
  21. Control of rice grain-filling and yield by a gene with a potential signature of domestication
  22. Sampling strategy for wild soybean (Glycine soja) populations based on their genetic diversity and fine-scale spatial genetic structure
  23. Differentiation of Indica-Japonica rice revealed by insertion/deletion (InDel) fragments obtained from the comparative genomic study of DNA sequences between 93-11 (Indica) and Nipponbare (Japonica)
  24. Experimental validation of inter-subspecific genetic diversity in rice represented by the differences between the DNA sequences of ‘Nipponbare’ and ‘93-11’
  25. Phylogenetic Analysis of AA-genome Oryza Species (Poaceae) Based on Chloroplast, Mitochondrial, and Nuclear DNA Sequences
  26. Estimating genetic diversity and sampling strategy for a wild soybean (Glycine soja) population based on different molecular markers
  27. Genetic Evaluation of in situ Conserved and Reintroduced Populations of Wild Rice (Oryza rufipogon: Poaceae) in China
  28. Can transgenic rice cause ecological risks through transgene escape?
  29. Can transgenic rice cause ecological risks through transgene escape?*
  30. Pollen competition between cultivated and wild rice species (Oryza sativaandO. rufipogon)