D
David D. Fang
Researcher at Agricultural Research Service
Publications - 104
Citations - 4626
David D. Fang is an academic researcher from Agricultural Research Service. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Quantitative trait locus. The author has an hindex of 32, co-authored 94 publications receiving 3729 citations. Previous affiliations of David D. Fang include University of California, Riverside & United States Department of Agriculture.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Identification of closely related citrus cultivars with inter-simple sequence repeat markers
David D. Fang,Mikeal L. Roose +1 more
TL;DR: Inter-simple sequence repeat (ISSR) markers generated by 22 primers were tested for their ability to distinguish among samples from 94 trees of 68 citrus cultivars; however, most of these cultivars are so closely related that they are difficult to distinguish by other molecular-marker techniques.
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Gossypium barbadense and Gossypium hirsutum genomes provide insights into the origin and evolution of allotetraploid cotton.
Yan Hu,Yan Hu,Jiedan Chen,Lei Fang,Lei Fang,Zhiyuan Zhang,Wei Ma,Yongchao Niu,Longzhen Ju,Jieqiong Deng,Ting Zhao,Ting Zhao,Jinmin Lian,Kobi Baruch,David D. Fang,Xia Liu,Yong-Ling Ruan,Yong-Ling Ruan,Mehboob-ur Rahman,Jinlei Han,Kai Wang,Qiong Wang,Huaitong Wu,Gaofu Mei,Yihao Zang,Zegang Han,Chenyu Xu,Weijuan Shen,Duofeng Yang,Zhanfeng Si,Fan Dai,Liangfeng Zou,Fei Huang,Bai Yulin,Yu-Gao Zhang,Avital Brodt,Hilla Ben-Hamo,Xiefei Zhu,Baoliang Zhou,Xueying Guan,Xueying Guan,Shuijin Zhu,Xiao-Ya Chen,Tianzhen Zhang,Tianzhen Zhang +44 more
TL;DR: High-quality de novo–assembled genomes of two cultivated allotetraploid cotton species and whole-genome comparative analyses provide insights into the evolution of cotton genomes and improvement of fiber quality and resilience to stress.
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Phylogenetic relationships within the genus Citrus (Rutaceae) and related genera as revealed by RFLP and RAPD analysis
TL;DR: Relationships among 88 accessions representing 45 Citrus species, three man-made hybrids, and six related genera were examined for restriction fragment length polymorphisms (RFLP) and random amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD) analysis showed that several accessions were probably assigned to the wrong species.
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Fingerprinting trifoliate orange germ plasm accessions with isozymes, RFLPs, and inter-simple sequence repeat markers
TL;DR: Three accessions recently introduced from China have relatively different fingerprints with 3–14 unique ISSR markers, and probably represent a much more divergent germ plasm that may be a valuable breeding resource.
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Development of a 63K SNP Array for Cotton and High-Density Mapping of Intraspecific and Interspecific Populations of Gossypium spp.
Amanda M. Hulse-Kemp,Jana Lemm,Joerg Plieske,Hamid Ashrafi,Ramesh Buyyarapu,David D. Fang,James Frelichowski,Marc Giband,Steve Hague,Lori L. Hinze,Kelli J. Kochan,Penny K. Riggs,Jodi A. Scheffler,Joshua A. Udall,Mauricio Ulloa,Shirley S Wang,Qian-Hao Zhu,Sumit K. Bag,Archana Bhardwaj,John J. Burke,Robert L. Byers,Michel Claverie,Michael A. Gore,David B. Harker,S. Islam,Johnie N. Jenkins,Don C. Jones,Jean-Marc Lacape,Danny J. Llewellyn,Richard G. Percy,Alan E. Pepper,Jesse Poland,Krishan Mohan Rai,Samir V. Sawant,Sunil Kumar Singh,Andrew Spriggs,Jen Taylor,Fei Wang,Scott Yourstone,Xiuting Zheng,Cindy Lawley,Martin W. Ganal,Allen Van Deynze,Iain W. Wilson,David M. Stelly +44 more
TL;DR: The produced intraspecific genetic map is the first saturated map that associates into 26 linkage groups corresponding to the number of cotton chromosomes for a cross between two G. hirsutum lines.