Mudanças entre as edições de "Germplasm"
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− | #It is the material that constitutes the physical basis of genetic inheritance, passed down from one generation to the next through reproductive cells (IBPGR, 1991). #Means that the material where a principle that can grow and develop further being defined as the sum of the hereditary material of a species. There are five categories of germplasm: wild relatives, local populations (landraces) or primitive varieties, cultivars that have been replaced; experimental lines, mutations and other products of breeding programs; modern cultivars. | + | #It is the material that constitutes the physical basis of genetic inheritance, passed down from one generation to the next through reproductive cells (IBPGR, 1991). |
− | #Physical basis of genetic leather that covers all hereditary material of some sort. (Embrapa, Glossary) | + | #Means that the material where a principle that can grow and develop further being defined as the sum of the hereditary material of a species. There are five categories of germplasm: wild relatives, local populations (landraces) or primitive varieties, cultivars that have been replaced; experimental lines, mutations and other products of breeding programs; modern cultivars. |
+ | #Physical basis of genetic leather that covers all hereditary material of some sort. <ref>(Embrapa, Glossary)Glossary of Genetic Resources. [[Embrapa Genetic Resources and Biotechnology]]. Available at: <http://www.cenargen.embrapa.br/recgen/glossario/glossario.html>. Accessed: February 2011.</ref><ref>IBPGR. Elsevier's dictionary of plant genetic resources. Rome, 1991. 187 p.</ref> | ||
Edição atual tal como às 10h24min de 30 de março de 2017
- It is the material that constitutes the physical basis of genetic inheritance, passed down from one generation to the next through reproductive cells (IBPGR, 1991).
- Means that the material where a principle that can grow and develop further being defined as the sum of the hereditary material of a species. There are five categories of germplasm: wild relatives, local populations (landraces) or primitive varieties, cultivars that have been replaced; experimental lines, mutations and other products of breeding programs; modern cultivars.
- Physical basis of genetic leather that covers all hereditary material of some sort. [1][2]
References
- ↑ (Embrapa, Glossary)Glossary of Genetic Resources. Embrapa Genetic Resources and Biotechnology. Available at: <http://www.cenargen.embrapa.br/recgen/glossario/glossario.html>. Accessed: February 2011.
- ↑ IBPGR. Elsevier's dictionary of plant genetic resources. Rome, 1991. 187 p.