Difference between revisions of "Curtis 1968"
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*https://scholar.google.com/scholar?cluster=17908643211849005526 | *https://scholar.google.com/scholar?cluster=17908643211849005526 | ||
− | *http://hawaiireedlab.com/pdf/curtis1968.pdf (internal lab link only) | + | *http://hawaiireedlab.com/pdf/c/curtis1968.pdf (internal lab link only) |
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+ | =Published Abstract= | ||
+ | Chromosome translocation heterozygotes (T/+) are usually semisterile, but translocation homozygotes (T/T) if viable are usually fully fertile. If such a viable translocation were produced in an insect pest, T/T insects could be reared in captivity and released into the wild, where matings with wild types (+/+) would produce T/+ progeny. | ||
[[Category:Publication]] | [[Category:Publication]] |
Latest revision as of 16:43, 22 September 2018
Citation
Curtis, C. F. (1968). Possible use of translocations to fix desirable genes in insect pest populations. Nature, 218(5139), 368.
Links
- https://scholar.google.com/scholar?cluster=17908643211849005526
- http://hawaiireedlab.com/pdf/c/curtis1968.pdf (internal lab link only)
Published Abstract
Chromosome translocation heterozygotes (T/+) are usually semisterile, but translocation homozygotes (T/T) if viable are usually fully fertile. If such a viable translocation were produced in an insect pest, T/T insects could be reared in captivity and released into the wild, where matings with wild types (+/+) would produce T/+ progeny.