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News

Wheat photo courtest of Keith/Ewing on flickr
Sunday, 24 May 2020

Researchers have a new understanding of the genetic makeup of a fungus that causes the disease Wheat Stripe Rust, one of the most destructive wheat diseases globally costing $1 billion annually.

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Tuesday, 03 Dec 2019

Research that could transform global rice production by increasing yields from the world’s number one food crop has been boosted by five more years of funding.

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Tuesday, 26 Nov 2019

Esteemed senior ANU biologist and mentor, Professor Barry Pogson, has been awarded the highest accolade for staff, the 2019 Peter Baume Award.

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Wheat
Saturday, 09 Nov 2019

Some clever detective work by an international team of scientists has uncovered how a deadly fungus - a stem rust called Ug99 - came about through some unusual breeding habits. The discovery will help protect wheat crops around the world from devastating fungal diseases.

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Dr Arun Yadav, from the ANU Research School of Biology
Wednesday, 16 Oct 2019

Australian research could help breeders develop more drought-resilient crops that can produce more food and more profit with less water.

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Professor Peter Solomon. Image Stuart Hay, ANU
Thursday, 19 Sep 2019

Researchers at The Australian National University (ANU) have shown how Australian wheat crops would cope if a destructive disease that’s yet to hit our shores ever made it into the country.

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Events

A collage of three images showing a woman giving a presentation, two women interacting in a plant-filled office, and two colleagues in lab coats discussing work in a laboratory.
17 Jul 2020 | 12pm

This research project investigates how photoassimilates moves from source leaves to other sink tissues that accumulate large amounts of carbohydrates. Many sinks such as stem and seeds/grains rely on the accumulation of sugars and starch during their development as they mature and become storage tissue.

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A woman with glasses smiling at the camera, with a historic clock tower and a modern building in the background on a sunny day.
1 Jul 2020 | 12pm

Most known examples of horizontal gene transfer (HGT) between eukaryotes are ancient. These events are identified primarily using phylogenetic methods on coding regions alone.

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A man standing in front of the Golden Gate Bridge on a sunny day.
26 Jun 2020 | 12pm

Zymoseptoria tritici is a host-specific necrotrophic pathogen, causing Septoria tritici blotch (STB) disease on wheat leaves. Although substantial efforts have been made to identify pathogenicity factors in Z. tritici, the genetic components contributing to the qualitative/quantitative virulence

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24 Jun 2020 | 12pm

Plant pathogens cause disease through secreted effector proteins, which act to modulate host physiology and promote infection. Often, effector proteins lack sequence identity to proteins of known function, or functional domains, making it impossible to infer function based on sequence alone.

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A person stands next to a large, muscular, red-suited statue, playfully mimicking its pose.
19 Jun 2020 | 12pm

The interactions of peptide ligands with leucine-rich repeat receptor-like kinases (LRR-RLKs) coordinate multiple plant biochemical pathways. Thus, there is a need for a simple method that identifies and validates peptide hormone-receptor pairings in vivo without disturbing native receptor complexes.

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10 Jun 2020 | 12pm

Photorespiratory metabolism is essential for plants to maintain functional photosynthesis in an oxygen-containing environment. Because the oxygenation reaction of Rubisco is followed by the loss of previously fixed carbon, photorespiration is often considered a wasteful process and considerable efforts are aimed at min

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