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Colin W. Hiebert

Researcher at Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada

Publications -  58
Citations -  1269

Colin W. Hiebert is an academic researcher from Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Stem rust. The author has an hindex of 18, co-authored 45 publications receiving 951 citations.

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An introgression on wheat chromosome 4DL in RL6077 (Thatcher*6/PI 250413) confers adult plant resistance to stripe rust and leaf rust (Lr67).

TL;DR: The leaf rust resistance gene in RL6077 is phenotypically similar to Lr34 which is located on chromosome 7D, but this gene is not involved in any translocation carried by RL60 77 and has been assigned the name Lr67.
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Genetics and mapping of seedling resistance to Ug99 stem rust in Canadian wheat cultivars 'Peace' and 'AC Cadillac'.

TL;DR: While further study is needed to determine the relationship between SrCAD and other Sr genes on chromosome 6DS, SrCad represents a valuable genetic resource for producing stem rust resistant wheat cultivars and is the basis for all of the seedling resistance to Ug99 in Canadian wheat cultivar.
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Microsatellite mapping of adult-plant leaf rust resistance gene Lr22a in wheat.

TL;DR: Microsatellite markers linked to the adult-plant leaf rust resistance gene Lr22a are identified and examined to examine their cross-applicability for marker-assisted selection in different genetic backgrounds and it is shown that GWM296 is useful for selecting Lr 22a in diverse genetic backgrounds.
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A review of wheat leaf rust research and the development of resistant cultivars in Canada

TL;DR: This review paper focuses exclusively on the research and development done in whole, or in part, in Canada on the epidemiology of wheat leaf rust and the connections between the different aspects of the research.
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Characterization of Sr9h, a wheat stem rust resistance allele effective to Ug99

TL;DR: The emergence of pathogen virulence to several resistance genes that are effective to the original Ug99 race TTKSK, including Sr9h, suggests that resistance genes should be used in combinations in order to increase resistance durability.