Maria Hernandez
Center for International Forestry Research
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Publication
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Gcb Bioenergy | 2014
César Pérez-Cruzado; David Sanchez-Ron; Roque Rodríguez-Soalleiro; Maria Hernandez; M. Mario Sánchez-Martín; Isabel Cañellas; Hortensia Sixto
The aim of this study was to evaluate the biomass production potential for the Spanish Iberian Peninsula using the Populus spp. ‘I‐214’ clone under several management regimes and land availability scenarios, and to determine its future contribution to Spanish energy demands.
BMC Plant Biology | 2015
Pablo Aleza; José Cuenca; Maria Hernandez; José Juárez; Luis Navarro; Patrick Ollitrault
BackgroundMapping centromere locations in plant species provides essential information for the analysis of genetic structures and population dynamics. The centromere’s position affects the distribution of crossovers along a chromosome and the parental heterozygosity restitution by 2n gametes is a direct function of the genetic distance to the centromere. Sexual polyploidisation is relatively frequent in Citrus species and is widely used to develop new seedless triploid cultivars. The study’s objectives were to (i) map the positions of the centromeres of the nine Citrus clementina chromosomes; (ii) analyse the crossover interference in unreduced gametes; and (iii) establish the pattern of genetic recombination in haploid clementine gametes along each chromosome and its relationship with the centromere location and distribution of genic sequences.ResultsTriploid progenies were derived from unreduced megagametophytes produced by second-division restitution. Centromere positions were mapped genetically for all linkage groups using half-tetrad analysis. Inference of the physical locations of centromeres revealed one acrocentric, four metacentric and four submetacentric chromosomes. Crossover interference was observed in unreduced gametes, with variation seen between chromosome arms. For haploid gametes, a strong decrease in the recombination rate occurred in centromeric and pericentromeric regions, which contained a low density of genic sequences. In chromosomes VIII and IX, these low recombination rates extended beyond the pericentromeric regions. The genomic region corresponding to a genetic distance < 5cM from a centromere represented 47% of the genome and 23% of the genic sequences.ConclusionsThe centromere positions of the nine citrus chromosomes were genetically mapped. Their physical locations, inferred from the genetic ones, were consistent with the sequence constitution and recombination pattern along each chromosome. However, regions with low recombination rates extended beyond the pericentromeric regions of some chromosomes into areas richer in genic sequences. The persistence of strong linkage disequilibrium between large numbers of genes promotes the stability of epistatic interactions and multilocus-controlled traits over successive generations but also maintains multi-trait associations. Identification of the centromere positions will allow the development of simple methods to analyse unreduced gamete formation mechanisms in a large range of genotypes and further modelling of genetic inheritance in sexual polyploidisation breeding schemes.
Annals of Botany | 2016
Maria Hernandez; Fernando Montes; Federico Ruiz; Gustavo López; Pilar Pita
BACKGROUND AND AIMS Stomatal conductance has long been considered of key interest in the study of plant adaptation to water stress. The expected increase in extreme meteorological events under a climate change scenario may compromise survival in Eucalyptus globulus plantations established in south-western Spain. We investigated to what extent changes in stomatal conductance in response to high vapour pressure deficits and water shortage are mediated by hydraulic and chemical signals in greenhouse-grown E. globulus clones. METHODS Rooted cuttings were grown in pots and submitted to two watering regimes. Stomatal conductance, shoot water potential, sap pH and hydraulic conductance were measured consecutively in each plant over 4 weeks under vapour pressure deficits ranging 0·42 to 2·25 kPa. Evapotranspiration, growth in leaf area and shoot biomass were also determined. KEY RESULTS There was a significant effect of both clone and watering regime in stomatal conductance and leaf-specific hydraulic conductance, but not in sap pH. Sap pH decreased as water potential and stomatal conductance decreased under increasing vapour pressure deficit. There was no significant relationship between stomatal conductance and leaf-specific hydraulic conductance. Stomata closure precluded shoot water potential from falling below -1·8 MPa. The percentage loss of hydraulic conductance ranged from 40 to 85 %. The highest and lowest leaf-specific hydraulic conductances were measured in clones from the same half-sib families. Water shortage reduced growth and evapotranspiration, decreases in evapotranspiration ranging from 14 to 32 % in the five clones tested. CONCLUSIONS Changes in sap pH seemed to be a response to changes in atmospheric conditions rather than soil water in the species. Stomata closed after a considerable amount of hydraulic conductance was lost, although intraspecific differences in leaf-specific hydraulic conductance suggest the possibility of selection for improved productivity under water-limiting conditions combined with high temperatures in the early stages of growth.
Annals of Botany | 2011
Pablo Aleza; Y. Froelicher; Sergio Schwarz; Manuel Agustí; Maria Hernandez; José Juárez; François Luro; Raphaël Morillon; Luis Navarro; Patrick Ollitrault
Canadian Journal of Forest Research | 2005
Fernando Montes; Maria Hernandez; Isabel Cañellas
Tree Genetics & Genomes | 2012
Pablo Aleza; José Juárez; Maria Hernandez; Patrick Ollitrault; Luis Navarro
Annals of Forest Science | 2006
Fernando Montes; Maria Hernandez; Rafael Calama; Isabel Cañellas
Forest Ecology and Management | 2017
Nerea Oliveira; Roque Rodríguez-Soalleiro; Maria Hernandez; Isabel Cañellas; Hortensia Sixto; César Pérez-Cruzado
Acta Horticulturae | 2012
Pablo Aleza; José Juárez; José Cuenca; Maria Hernandez; Patrick Ollitrault; Luis Navarro
Archive | 2009
Pablo Aleza; José Juárez; Maria Hernandez; Patrick Ollitrault; Luis Navarro
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Centre de coopération internationale en recherche agronomique pour le développement
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