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A rapid and efficient transformation protocol for the grass Brachypodium distachyon.
Brachypodium sylvaticum is an invasive species colonizing new areas and outcompeting native plants.
Brachypodium distachyon.
The larvae feed on Poaceae species, mainly Brachypodium species.
Phylogenetic reconstruction of the genus Brachypodium P. Beauv.
Tor Grass (Brachypodium pinnatum)
Mutagenesis of the Model Grass Brachypodium distachyon with Sodium Azide.
Brachypodium distachyon is an emerging experimental model grass that has many attributes that make it an excellent model for temperate cereals.
The dominant chalk grassland community at Park Gate Down is CG4 Brachypodium pinnatum.
The larvae feed on Brachypodium, Poa, Stipa pennata and Aegilops geniculata.
Ribosomal DNA variation and its phylogenetic implication in the genus Brachypodium (Poaceae).
Brachypodium distachyon, commonly called purple false brome, is a grass species native to southern Europe, northern Africa and southwestern Asia east to India.
Magnaporthe grisea interactions with the model grass Brachypodium distachyon closely resemble those with rice (Oryza sativa).
In England most foodplant records were on False Brome (Brachypodium sylvaticum) but it may have used Bromus spp.
Johnson J, Identifying Brachypodium sylvaticum (slender false brome), San Francisco Watershed Council, January 2004.
Oregon Brachypodium sylvaticum is a newly invasive brome species in Oregon that is rapidly expanding in the Pacific Northwest.
Recently, efficient Agrobacterium-mediated transformation systems have been developed for a range of Brachypodium genotypes enabling the development of T-DNA mutant collections.
Molecular phylogeny of the grass genus Brachypodium p-beauv based on RFLP and RAPD analysis.
Less specific records of Poa, Bromus, Festuca, Milium, Brachypodium, Lolium, Avena, Alopecurus, Anthoxanthum.
The larvae feed on Eriophorum, Poa annua, Calamagrostis canescens, Brachypodium and Molinia species (including Molinia coerulea).
The larvae feed on Sesleria coerulea and Gramineae, Sesleria, Festuca, Stipa, Poa, Brachypodium and Lolium species.
A further small area of chalk grassland dominated by Wood False-brome Brachypodium sylvaticum and Glaucous Sedge Carex flacca occurs at the foot of Pink Hill.
The larvae feed on Dianella, Brachypodium distachyon, Cynodon dactylon, Erharta erecta, Panicum maximum, Pennisetum clandestinum and Thuarea involuta.
It is a designated SSSI as a representative example of the Brachypodium sylvaticum, Oak / Ash (slender falsebrome oak/ash) group of broadleaved woodlands.
The main chalk grassland communities are CG4 Brachypodium pinnatum and CG5 Bromus erectus - Brachypodium pinnatum.