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Brad M. Potts

Researcher at University of Tasmania

Publications -  331
Citations -  11980

Brad M. Potts is an academic researcher from University of Tasmania. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Eucalyptus globulus. The author has an hindex of 51, co-authored 318 publications receiving 10789 citations. Previous affiliations of Brad M. Potts include Central Science Laboratory & Hobart Corporation.

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Advances in reproductive biology and seed production systems of Eucalyptus : the case of Eucalyptus globulus

TL;DR: The research on the reproductive biology of E. globulus is reviewed, with a focus on its breeding system and advances made in seed production systems.
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Molecular differentiation within and between Eucalyptus risdonii, E. amygdalina and their hybrids using RAPD markers

TL;DR: The study suggests that morphological appearance does not necessarily reflect genetic (RAPD) status and in some cases detectable RAPD differences between spatially close populations of the same species may be as great or greater than the differences between species.
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Inheritance Of Resistance to Mammalian Herbivores and of Plant Defensive Chemistry in an Eucalyptus Species

TL;DR: The results demonstrated that the phenotypic expression of resistance of the inter-race F1 hybrids supported the additive pattern of inheritance, as these hybrids were intermediate in resistance compared to the pure parental hybrids.
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Achievements in forest tree improvement in Australia and New Zealand 9. Genetic improvement of Eucalyptus nitens in Australia

TL;DR: E. nitens is the second most widely planted eucalypt species in Australia and its genotypes are almost universally deployed as seedlings derived from open-pollinated seed-orchards.
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The Spatial Pattern and Scale of Variation in Eucalyptus globulus ssp Globulus: Variation in Seedling Abnormalities and Early Growth

TL;DR: Variation in seedling abnormalities and 2- and 4-year growth were studied in a trial in north-westem Tasmania established from 594 open-pollinated families from throughout the geographical range of Eucalyptus globulus Labill.