2008
DOI: 10.1016/j.plantsci.2008.01.016
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The evolving story of rice evolution

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Cited by 354 publications
(339 citation statements)
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References 88 publications
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“…The rayada cultivars comprise a very particular rice sown in November-December and harvested as much as 12 months later. This group is able to tolerate cold and flooding, is photoperiod sensitive and lacks secondary dormancy (Glaszmann, 1987;Vaughan et al, 2008). Having these unusual characteristics and being genetically distinct, rayada rice should be considered as a new (the sixth) major group of rice germplasm.…”
Section: Six Distinct and Major Groups Within O Sativamentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…The rayada cultivars comprise a very particular rice sown in November-December and harvested as much as 12 months later. This group is able to tolerate cold and flooding, is photoperiod sensitive and lacks secondary dormancy (Glaszmann, 1987;Vaughan et al, 2008). Having these unusual characteristics and being genetically distinct, rayada rice should be considered as a new (the sixth) major group of rice germplasm.…”
Section: Six Distinct and Major Groups Within O Sativamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Rice not only serves as a primary food source for more than half of the world's population (Khush, 1997), but also provides an excellent model system for studying a wide range of biological questions (Shimamoto and Kyozuka, 2002;Wing et al, 2005;Zhang et al, 2008). As a result of both natural and artificial selection, rice has evolved into a crop containing high levels of morphological, physiological and genetic diversity, with 41 20 000 distinct rice varieties recognized worldwide (Oka, 1988;Khush, 1997;Sang and Ge, 2007;Vaughan et al, 2008). An assessment and classification of this diversity is important for effective utilization of the germplasm and will provide a powerful evolutionary framework for many future biological studies using rice as a model.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The history of O. sativa itself has been thoroughly reviewed elsewhere (Vaughan et al 2008a, b), and will only be summarized here. Oryza sativa is comprised of two subspecies, indica and japonica, both of which are domesticated from a wild ancestor similar to O. rufipogon.…”
Section: The Species O Sativamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the presence of gene flow and selection, both of which are occurring, the two patterns in fact cannot be distinguished. (See also discussions in Vaughan et al (2008a, b)) For a few types of domesticated rice, the history appears easier to assess. For example, fragrant rice is a result of a mutation at the Badh2 locus (Chen et al 2008), which encodes the gene for betain aldehyde dehydrogenase.…”
Section: The Species O Sativamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Wild rice was first domesticated in the Yangtze region of China to 2 cultivated subspecies, indica and japonica [1]. Phylogeographic investigations have suggested that cultivated rice has experienced at least two independent domestications: indica rice was domesticated within a region south of the Himalaya mountains whereas japonica was domesticated from wild rice in southern China [2].…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%