Útdráttur
Genetic engineering is becoming an important tool for the improvement of plants for various forms of production. As varieties are developed for both food and non-food use different production lines must be kept separate. For good management practices of different lines an understanding of gene-flow is essential. Barley has been proposed to be an ideal plant species for genetic engineering as it has a low frequency of cross-fertilization and limited seed dispersal. In the present study, pollen-mediated exchange of genetic material between non-transgenic closed-flowering barley variants was examined in experimental plots under sub-arctic conditions in Iceland. The pollen-mediated dispersal was studied using the barley varieties Golden Promise and Ven, as pollen donor and acceptor, respectively. Only two hybrid plants were identified from a total of 700,000 screened plants giving a hybridization frequency of 0.0003%. It is concluded that adequate isolation distances and good management practices should suffice to prevent cross-fertilization between different lines of barley.
| Upprunalegt tungumál | Enska |
|---|---|
| Síður (frá-til) | 51-59 |
| Síðufjöldi | 9 |
| Fræðitímarit | Icelandic Agricultural Sciences |
| Bindi | 23 |
| Númer tölublaðs | 1 |
| Útgáfustaða | Útgefið - 2010 |
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