Publications by authors named "Ryan Graebner"

Article Synopsis
  • Effective weed control is vital for farmers to enhance crop yields but traditional methods like herbicides can be costly and harmful to the environment.* -
  • The Weed Warden is an affordable plant detection sensor that utilizes open-source multispectral technology to identify vegetation and trigger weed removal systems when necessary.* -
  • Utilizing the Enhanced Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (ENDVI), the Weed Warden has demonstrated superior consistency in detecting small vegetation, making it a promising alternative to high-cost robotic weeders.*
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Classic evolutionary theory suggests that mutations associated with antimicrobial and pesticide resistance result in a fitness cost in the absence of the selective antimicrobial agent or pesticide. There is experimental evidence to support fitness costs associated with resistance to anti-microbial compounds and pesticides across many biological disciplines, including human pathology, entomology, plant sciences, and plant pathology. However, researchers have also found examples of neutral and increased fitness associated with resistance, where the effect of a given resistance mutation depends on environmental and biological factors.

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The Genome-Wide Association Studies approach was used to detect Quantitative Trait Loci associated with tocochromanol concentrations using a panel of 1,466 barley accessions. All major tocochromanol types- α-, β-, δ-, γ-tocopherol and tocotrienol- were assayed. We found 13 single nucleotide polymorphisms associated with the concentration of one or more of these tocochromanol forms in barley, seven of which were within 2 cM of sequences homologous to cloned genes associated with tocochromanol production in barley and/or other plants.

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