2019
DOI: 10.21273/hortsci13923-19
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Cytogenetics, Ploidy, and Genome Sizes of Camellia and Related Genera

Abstract: Camellia L., the most speciose member of the diverse tea family Theaceae, has a long and complex horticultural history. Extensive cultivation and hybridization have produced thousands of varieties of Camellia, including commercially important crops such as cultivated tea, oilseed, and iconic flowering shrubs. Cytogenetics of Camellia and related genera is complicated; chromosome number and ploidy can vary widely between sp… Show more

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Cited by 13 publications
(9 citation statements)
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“…Particularly, most of the mutant forms derived from "Kolkhida" or "Quimen" seeds treated with G-irradiation showed increased genome size. Our results are consistent with other published data on tea, which indicated 2C DNA content in CSS ranged from 6.0-7.0 pg, whereas 4C DNA content was around 13.0 pg (Hembree et al, 2019). In CSA, the 2C DNA content ranged from 5.8-7.7 pg (Huang et al, 2013;Sharma et al, 2019).…”
Section: Genome Size and Leaf Area Size Variability In The Tea Collec...supporting
confidence: 93%
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“…Particularly, most of the mutant forms derived from "Kolkhida" or "Quimen" seeds treated with G-irradiation showed increased genome size. Our results are consistent with other published data on tea, which indicated 2C DNA content in CSS ranged from 6.0-7.0 pg, whereas 4C DNA content was around 13.0 pg (Hembree et al, 2019). In CSA, the 2C DNA content ranged from 5.8-7.7 pg (Huang et al, 2013;Sharma et al, 2019).…”
Section: Genome Size and Leaf Area Size Variability In The Tea Collec...supporting
confidence: 93%
“…Ploidy and genome size can influence reproductive compatibility, fertility, and heritability of traits wherefore these data can be useful for understanding breeding potential in collections (Hembree et al, 2019). Our results showed remarkable intraspecific variation in the genome size of the 43 selected genotypes.…”
Section: Genome Size and Leaf Area Size Variability In The Tea Collec...mentioning
confidence: 63%
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“…Clade Camellia II contains C. granthamiana , C. grijsii , C. shensiensis , and some members of the sect. Camellia , which generally have polyploids (Ming, 2000; Hembree et al, 2019) and are distributed in central, southern, and south‐western China. Chang (1996) established sect.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Compared with mammals, plants contain more polygene families and higher frequency of polyploidy (Lockton and Gaut, 2005). Many conventional and newly developed oil crops have tetraploid or hexaploid genomes, such as cotton, rapeseed, Brassica juncea, peanut, oil tea, and camelina (Chalhoub et al, 2014;Hembree et al, 2019;Li et al, 2015;Yang et al, 2016;Zhuang et al, 2019). The genomic research of oil plants covers the origin of subgenome, expression advantage, gene function differentiation, genome reorganization, and asymmetric evolution (Cheng et al, 2014;Liu et al, 2014;Parkin et al, 2014;Yang et al, 2016).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%