scispace - formally typeset
A

Anthony H. D. Brown

Researcher at Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

Publications -  152
Citations -  10838

Anthony H. D. Brown is an academic researcher from Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Germplasm. The author has an hindex of 49, co-authored 150 publications receiving 10506 citations.

Papers
More filters
Book

Plant Population Genetics, Breeding, and Genetic Resources

TL;DR: A resource for students and research workers in population genetics, molecular evolution, evolutionary biology, ecological genetics, forestry and crop improvement.
Journal ArticleDOI

Core collections: a practical approach to genetic resources management

Anthony H. D. Brown
- 15 Jan 1989 - 
TL;DR: Large numbers of entries are now lodged in many of the world's germ-plasm collections of crop and pasture plants, and the problems of how best to conserve it and how to use it in plant breeding have intensified.
Journal ArticleDOI

Enzyme polymorphism in plant populations

TL;DR: Evidence indicates that inbreeding plant species show more intense geographic and microgeographic differentiation, and more intense multilocus associations than outbreeders, and a closer integration of the joint microevolution of mating systems, and of genetic variation is required.
Journal ArticleDOI

Multilocus structure of natural populations of hordeum spontaneum

TL;DR: The association of alleles among different loci was studied in natural populations of Hordeum spontaneum, the evolutionary progenitor of cultivated barley, and the variance of the number of heterozygous loci in two randomly chosen gametes affords a useful measure of such association.
Book

The Conservation of Plant Biodiversity

TL;DR: The biological system of conservation is described in this article, where the conservation in situ of useful or endangered wild species and in situ conservation of threatened and endangered plants are discussed. And the conservation of cultivated plants is discussed.