Plant Breeding Reviews 2010
DOI: 10.1002/9780470880579.ch6
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DNA‐Based Identification of Clonally Propagated Cultivars

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Cited by 18 publications
(13 citation statements)
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“…Unfortunately, up to 30% of this material is, in all likelihood, mislabeled according to the molecular data. Similarly high levels of identification problems have been reported from other gene banks with clonally propagated crops (reviews in Nybom and Weising 2010;van Treuren et al 2010), clearly demonstrating the need for proper molecular marker-based identification as a useful approach for all phenotyping projects. Similar work is performed at ACW in Switzerland.…”
Section: Molecular Markersmentioning
confidence: 67%
“…Unfortunately, up to 30% of this material is, in all likelihood, mislabeled according to the molecular data. Similarly high levels of identification problems have been reported from other gene banks with clonally propagated crops (reviews in Nybom and Weising 2010;van Treuren et al 2010), clearly demonstrating the need for proper molecular marker-based identification as a useful approach for all phenotyping projects. Similar work is performed at ACW in Switzerland.…”
Section: Molecular Markersmentioning
confidence: 67%
“…SSR markers, in particular, are more useful due to their reproducibility, codominance, polymorphism and transferability among related species and genera. They help in resolving the differences that arise due to widespread crossability and susceptibility of characters to phenotypic plasticity in the presence of environmental variation (Nybom and Weising 2010).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Molecular markers, especially Simple Sequence Repeats (SSR), are commonly used for quantification of the amount of diversity in national collections of various plant crops (Nybom and Weising, 2010). SSR markers have thus been widely used for evaluation of genetic diversity and genetic relatedness in apple germplasm collections (Guarino et al, 2006;Pereira-Lorenzo et al, 2007;Garkava-Gustavsson et al, 2008;Farrokhi et al, 2011;Lacis et al, 2011;Naseri et al, 2011;Patzak et al, 2012).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%