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Dive into the research topics where James F. Hancock is active.

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Featured researches published by James F. Hancock.


Plant evolution and the origin of crop species. | 2003

Plant evolution and the origin of crop species.

James F. Hancock

Part 1. Evolutionary Processes 1. Chromosome Structure and Genetic Variability 2. Assortment of Genetic Variability 3. The Multifactoral Genome 4. Polyploidy and Gene Duplication 5. Speciation Part 2. Agricultural Origins and Crop Evolution 6. Origins of Agriculture 7. The Dynamics of Plant Domestication 8. Cereal Grains 9. Protein Plants 10. Starchy Staples and Sugars 11. Fruits, Vegetables, Oils and Fibers 12. Postscript: Germplasm Resources Ex situ conservation In situ conservation


Theoretical and Applied Genetics | 1989

Paternal inheritance of plastids in Medicago sativa

C. M. Schumann; James F. Hancock

SummaryPlastids are plant cellular organelles that are generally inherited from the maternal parent in the angiosperms. Many species exhibit biparental inheritance of plastids, but usually with a predominantly maternal influence. In contrast to this, we report strong paternal inheritance of plastids in reciprocal crosses of alfalfa, Medicago sativa, by following restriction fragment length polymorphisms for plastid DNA in two normal green plastids. Mitochondrial inheritance remained exclusively maternal.


Theoretical and Applied Genetics | 1990

Early-acting inbreeding depression and reproductive success in the highbush blueberry, Vaccinium corymbosum L.

S. L. Krebs; James F. Hancock

SummaryTetraploid Vaccinium corymbosum genotypes exhibit wide variability in seed set following self- and cross-pollinations. In this paper, a post-zygotic mechanism (seed abortion) under polygenic control is proposed as the basis for fertility differences in this species. A pollen chase experiment indicated that self-pollen tubes fertilize ovules, but are also ‘outcompeted’ by foreign male gametes in pollen mixtures. Matings among cultivars derived from a pedigree showed a linear decrease in seed number per fruit, and increase in seed abortion, with increasing relatedness among parents. Selfed (S1) progeny from self-fertile parents were largely self-sterile. At zygotic levels of inbreeding of F>0.3 there was little or no fertility, suggesting that an inbreeding threshold regulates reproductive success in V. corymbosum matings. Individuals below the threshold are facultative selfers, while those above it are obligate outcrossers. Inbreeding also caused a decrease in pollen viability, and reduced female fertility more rapidly than male fertility. These phenomena are discussed in terms of two models of genetic load: (1) mutational load — homozygosity for recessive embryolethal or sub-lethal mutations and (2) segregational load — loss of allelic interactions essential for embryonic vigor. Self-infertility in highbush blueberries is placed in the context of ‘late-acting’ self-incompatibility versus ‘early-acting’ inbreeding depression in angiosperms.


American Journal of Botany | 1993

Morphometric variation in oaks of the Apostle Islands in Wisconsin: Evidence of hybridization between Quercus rubra and Q.ellipsoidalis (Fagaceae)

Richard J. Jensen; Stan C. Hokanson; J. G. Isebrands; James F. Hancock

The Apostle Islands in Lake Superior are populated by trees that are clearly related to Quercus rubra L. However, several islands have trees with morphological characteristics suggestive of hybridization with Q. ellipsoidalis Hill. Leaf specimens were collected from trees in five locations: the outermost island, an intermediate island, the nearest-shore island, the northeast shoreline, and an inland forest about 24 km from the shoreline. Seventeen landmarks were digitized for two to five leaves per tree. These landmarks were used to generate nine linear characters and three angles. These characters, along with the number of bristle tips per leaf, were used in various combinations for several principal component analyses. In addition, the landmark configurations were examined using rotational-fit methods. The patterns observed in both types of analysis indicate phenotypic variation coincident with a line connecting the two most distant sample sites. The location nearest the geographic center of this line is also nearest the center of the two-dimensional view of phenotypic variation. Trees at each site illustrate a distinctive pattern in the rotational-fit analyses, and patterns of co-variation in the morphometric characters are different for each site. The observed morphometric variation is consistent with the hypothesis that there is hybridization between these two species, most likely in the form of introgression from Q. ellipsoidalis into Q. rubra.


BioScience | 2003

A Framework for Assessing the Risk of Transgenic Crops

James F. Hancock

Abstract The environmental risks of many transgenic crops can be evaluated without additional experimentation by using already available information on the biology of the crop, the presence of compatible relatives, and the transgene phenotype. The level of crop invasiveness and the location of compatible relatives can be determined by consulting local floras and the crop literature. Decisions about invasiveness can be bolstered by determining the number of weediness traits carried by the crop and its congeners. The potential impact of transgenes can be ranked by their likely effect on reproductive success, ranging from neutral to advantageous to detrimental. This scheme can identify not only the low-risk transgene–crop combinations that are safe to deploy but also those that either are too dangerous to release or require additional experimentation.


Euphytica | 2002

Utilizing wild Fragaria virginiana in strawberry cultivar development: Inheritance of photoperiod sensitivity, fruit size, gender, female fertility and disease resistance

James F. Hancock; James J. Luby; Adam Dale; Peter W. Callow; Sedat Serçe; A. El-Shiek

The genetics of photoperiod sensitivity, flowering date, fruit size, gender, female fertility, and disease resistance were investigated in progeny between sets of elite F. virginiana selections and F. × ananassa cultivars and selections planted at sites in Michigan, Minnesota and Ontario. Progeny means varied considerably for all the production traits. Most notable were the large fruit and high fertility observed in crosses with High Falls 22 at all three sites, and Montreal River 10 in Ontario and Michigan. Fragaria virginiana ssp. virginiana parents yielded progeny with much larger fruit than F. virginianassp. glauca parents. General combining ability was significant for all traits at all locations, while specific combining ability was significant for only fruit diameter, ovule set and fruit set in Michigan. Overall, the highest number of day-neutral genotypes were detected in Ontario (mean =44%) compared to Minnesota (31%) and Michigan (26%). In progeny populations of day-neutral F. × ananassa × short-day F. virginiana almost all fit the 1:1 ratio expected if day-neutrality is regulated by a single dominant gene; however, only a few families of short-day F. × ananassa ×day-neutral F. virginianacrosses fit a 1:1 ratio. Likewise, in progeny of day-neutral F. virginiana ×day-neutral F × ananassa crosses, only a few of them fit the 3:1 ratio expected if day-neutrality is regulated by a single dominant gene. These data suggest that it should be relatively easy to useF. virginiana germplasm in strawberry cultivar improvement, and that several different sources of day-neutrality may exist in natural populations.


American Journal of Botany | 1997

Morphological and molecular variation among populations of octoploid Fragaria virginiana and F. chiloensis (Rosaceae) from North America.

Richard E. Harrison; James J. Luby; Glenn R. Furnier; James F. Hancock

Relationships among 37 North American octoploid strawberry populations were studied by evaluating 44 morphological traits and 36 randomly amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD) markers. Both data sets were analyzed by principal components analysis and UPGMA clustering based on genetic distances. Morphological data defined five groups: east of the Missouri River (Fragaria virginiana ssp. virginiana), the Black Hills (F. virginiana ssp. virginiana and ssp. glauca), from the eastern Cascades to the eastern Rocky Mountains (F. virginiana ssp. glauca), the western Cascades and Olympic Peninsula (F. virginiana ssp. platypetala), and the Pacific coast (F. chiloensis). Canonical discriminant analysis clearly discriminated populations into these provenances, suggesting that these groups are morphologically distinct. RAPD data defined three groups, one with F. virginiana ssp. virginiana and ssp. glauca, another with F. chiloensis, and a third with F. virginiana ssp. platypetala. The latter was more similar to F. chiloensis than F. virginiana, suggesting it is likely a subspecies of F. chiloensis. All octoploid North American strawberries have likely derived from a common ancestor and have differentiated into F. chiloensis and F. virginiana by adapting to moister and drier environments, respectively.


BioScience | 1993

Genetic Resources at Our Doorstep: The Wild Strawberries

James F. Hancock; James J. Luby

cessible genetic resources: plants literally at our doorstep. Fortunately, strawberry breeders and related scientists are actively exploiting genes from the wild ancestors of this New World crop to provide stable productivity for farmers and high-quality fruit for consumers. In recent years, germ plasm explorers have systematically collected and evaluated wild strawberries. Genes from these collections are, in turn, being incorporated into breeding populations to control disease and pest problems and afford tolerance to environmental stresses. Only by selection under specific environmental conditions have breed-


American Journal of Botany | 1998

Evolution in an autopolyploid group displaying predominantly bivalent pairing at meiosis: genomic similarity of diploid Vaccinium darrowi and autotetraploid V. corymbosum (Ericaceae).

Luping Qu; James F. Hancock; J. H. Whallon

The genomic relationship between V. darrowi Camp (2n = 2x = 24) and V. corymbosum L. (2n = 4x = 48) was examined using an interspecific tetraploid hybrid, US 75, and representatives of the parental species. Two features in the background of US 75 led to the prediction that it was an allopolyploid: (1) the parental species are quite distinct morphologically and geographically, and (2) the diploid genome was incorporated into US 75 via an unreduced gamete. However, US 75 recently was shown to display tetrasomic inheritance using molecular markers. In the present cytological study, US 75 was found to have a lower than expected number of multivalents for an autopolyploid, although it had a significantly higher number of quadrivalents than its autotetraploid parent, V. corymbosum. Normal chromosome distributions were observed at anaphase I and II, and pollen viability was high. Our findings suggest that little genomic divergence has developed between the Vaccinium species and that the polyploids may freely exchange genes with sympatric diploid species via unreduced gametes. This pattern of hybridization could be an important component of evolution in all autopolyploid groups, making them much more dynamic than traditionally assumed.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Increasing Strawberry Fruit Sensorial and Nutritional Quality Using Wild and Cultivated Germplasm

Jacopo Diamanti; Franco Capocasa; F. Balducci; Maurizio Battino; James F. Hancock; Bruno Mezzetti

Background Increasing antioxidant levels in fruit through breeding is an important option to support higher antioxidant intake particularly when fruit consumption is low. Indeed, if nutritional components are also combined with a high standard of sensorial fruit quality, the perspective for consumer health can be further improved by encouraging more fruit consumption. Wild species are valued by strawberry breeders as sources of novel traits, especially for pest resistance and abiotic stress tolerance. Furthermore, previous investigations have shown improvements in fruit nutritional quality in breeding material that originated from Fragaria virginiana ssp. glauca (FVG) inter-species crosses. Recently, commercial varieties of strawberries have also shown interesting variability in fruit nutritional quality. Results Strawberry fruit sensorial and nutritional qualities generated by Fragaria inter-species and intra-species crosses were evaluated on 78 offspring derived from 8 families: two that originated from F. × ananassa intra-species crossing; three from back-crossing of F1– FVG × F. × ananassa; and three from back-crossing of BC1– FVG × F. × ananassa. The genetic variability from the three types of cross combinations was analyzed by calculation of the correlations among the fruit sensorial and nutritional parameters. The results obtained show that two subsequent back-crossing generations from an inter-species crossing combination with F. virginiana ssp. glauca provides useful improvement of the fruit nutritional and sensorial qualities that is combined with agronomic standards that are close to those requested at the commercial level. Improvements of these traits can also be achieved by programming F. × ananassa intra-species crosses and producing progeny with productivity traits more similar to those of the commercial cultivars. Conclusions The two types of combination programs (inter-species back-crosses, and intra-species crosses) can be used to improve strawberry nutritional quality.

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Chad E. Finn

United States Department of Agriculture

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Sedat Serçe

Mustafa Kemal University

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Peter W. Callow

Michigan State University

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Guo Qing Song

Michigan State University

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Rebecca Grumet

Michigan State University

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Amy F. Iezzoni

Michigan State University

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Eric J. Hanson

Michigan State University

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