scispace - formally typeset
Search or ask a question
Institution

Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada

FacilityOttawa, Ontario, Canada
About: Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada is a facility organization based out in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Soil water. The organization has 10921 authors who have published 21332 publications receiving 748193 citations. The organization is also known as: Department of Agriculture and Agri-Food.
Topics: Population, Soil water, Manure, Tillage, Loam


Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Estimation of heritabilities of milk urea nitrogen (MUN) and lactose in the first 3 parities and their genetic relationships with milk, fat, protein, and SCS in Canadian Holsteins found that fertility traits were close to zero, thus diminishing the potential of using those traits as possible indicators of fertility.

177 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: How the interplay between glucose levels, cAMP and ambient pH serves to coordinate the transition between these phases and dictate the biochemical and developmental events that define them is outlined.
Abstract: Sclerotinia sclerotiorum is unusual among necrotrophic pathogens in its requirement for senescent tissues to establish an infection and to complete the life cycle. A model for the infection process has emerged whereby the pathogenic phase is bounded by saprophytic phases; the distinction being that the dead tissues in the latter are generated by the actions of the pathogen. Initial colonization of dead tissue provides nutrients for pathogen establishment and resources to infect healthy plant tissue. The early pathogenicity stage involves production of oxalic acid and the expression of cell wall degrading enzymes, such as specific isoforms of polygalacturonase (SSPG1) and protease (ASPS), at the expanding edge of the lesion. Such activities release small molecules (oligo-galacturonides and peptides) that serve to induce the expression of a second wave of degradative enzymes that collectively bring about the total dissolution of the plant tissue. Oxalic acid and other metabolites and enzymes suppress host defences during the pathogenic phase, while other components initiate host cell death responses leading to the formation of necrotic tissue. The pathogenic phase is followed by a second saprophytic phase, the transition to which is effected by declining cAMP levels as glucose becomes available and further hydrolytic enzyme synthesis is repressed. Low cAMP levels and an acidic environment generated by the secretion of oxalic acid promote sclerotial development and completion of the life cycle. This review brings together histological, biochemical and molecular information gathered over the past several decades to develop this tri-phasic model for infection. In several instances, studies with Botrytis species are drawn upon for supplemental and supportive evidence for this model. In this process, we attempt to outline how the interplay between glucose levels, cAMP and ambient pH serves to coordinate the transition between these phases and dictate the biochemical and developmental events that define them.

177 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
22 Mar 2012-Nature
TL;DR: It is shown that the most plausible explanation is that predators impose less selection for mimetic fidelity on smaller hoverfly species because they are less profitable prey items, which supports the relaxed-selection hypothesis and rejects several key hypotheses for imperfect mimicry.
Abstract: Although exceptional examples of adaptation are frequently celebrated, some outcomes of natural selection seem far from perfect. For example, many hoverflies (Diptera: Syrphidae) are harmless (Batesian) mimics of stinging Hymenoptera. However, although some hoverfly species are considered excellent mimics, other species bear only a superficial resemblance to their models and it is unclear why this is so. To evaluate hypotheses that have been put forward to explain interspecific variation in the mimetic fidelity of Palearctic Syrphidae we use a comparative approach. We show that the most plausible explanation is that predators impose less selection for mimetic fidelity on smaller hoverfly species because they are less profitable prey items. In particular, our findings, in combination with previous results, allow us to reject several key hypotheses for imperfect mimicry: first, human ratings of mimetic fidelity are positively correlated with both morphometric measures and avian rankings, indicating that variation in mimetic fidelity is not simply an illusion based on human perception; second, no species of syrphid maps out in multidimensional space as being intermediate in appearance between several different hymenopteran model species, as the multimodel hypothesis requires; and third, we find no evidence for a negative relationship between mimetic fidelity and abundance, which calls into question the kin-selection hypothesis. By contrast, a strong positive relationship between mimetic fidelity and body size supports the relaxed-selection hypothesis, suggesting that reduced predation pressure on less profitable prey species limits the selection for mimetic perfection.

177 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the standing stock and potential mineralization rate of POC (defined as material >53 µm diam) at depths of 0 to 50, 50 to 125, and 125 to 200 mm in four Boralfs (loam, silt loam, clay loam and clay) under conventional shallow tillage (CT) and 4 to 16 yr of zero-tillage (ZT) in northern Alberta and British Columbia.
Abstract: Conservation of soil organic carbon (SOC) is important for improving soil quality. Increasing the pool of particulate organic carbon (POC), thought to have a “slow” or medium turnover rate, with conservation tillage may be a critical step in improving the quality of agricultural soils. We determined the standing stock and potential mineralization rate of POC (defined as material >53 µm diam.) at depths of 0 to 50, 50 to 125, and 125 to 200 mm in four Boralfs (loam, silt loam, clay loam, and clay) under conventional shallow tillage (CT) and 4 to 16 yr of zero tillage (ZT) in northern Alberta and British Columbia. Standing stock of POC was consistently different between tillage regimes only at a depth of 0 to 50 mm, averaging 0.63 kg m⁻² under CT and 0.76 kg m⁻² under ZT. However, the ratio of specific POC mineralization to specific whole-SOC mineralization averaged 23% greater under ZT than under CT, suggesting that POC was of higher quality (i.e., more mineralizable) under ZT relative to other pools of SOC. With increasing clay content of the original soil, specific mineralization rate of POC increased after clay was removed by dispersion. This result suggests that clay may play an important role in sequestering POC by protecting its decomposition. Particulate organic C content was a more sensitive indicator of tillage-induced changes in SOC than the total amount of SOC. Zero tillage in this cold semiarid climate may increase both the active and slow pools of SOC within several years. Contribution from the Northern Agriculture Research Centre.

176 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The existence of two separate, but temporally connected processes that contribute to dormancy development in some deciduous woody plant: one driven byPhotoperiod and influenced by moderate temperatures; the other driven by abiotic stresses, such as low temperature in combination with long photoperiods is proposed.
Abstract: The role of temperature during dormancy development is being reconsidered as more research emerges demonstrating that temperature can significantly influence growth cessation and dormancy development in woody plants. However, there are seemingly contradictory responses to warm and low temperature in the literature. This research/review paper aims to address this contradiction. The impact of temperature was examined in four poplar clones and two dogwood ecotypes with contrasting dormancy induction patterns. Under short day (SD) conditions, warm night temperature (WT) strongly accelerated timing of growth cessation leading to greater dormancy development and cold hardiness in poplar hybrids. In contrast, under long day (LD) conditions, low night temperature (LT) can completely bypass the short photoperiod requirement in northern but not southern dogwood ecotypes. These findings are in fact consistent with the literature in which both coniferous and deciduous woody plant species’ growth cessation, bud set or dormancy induction are accelerated by temperature. The contradictions are addressed when photoperiod and ecotypes are taken into account in which the combination of either SD/WT (northern and southern ecotypes) or LD/LT (northern ecotypes only) are separated. Photoperiod insensitive types are driven to growth cessation by LT. Also consistent is the importance of night temperature in regulating these warm and cool temperature responses. However, the physiological basis for these temperature effects remain unclear. Changes in water content, binding and mobility are factors known to be associated with dormancy induction in woody plants. These were measured using non-destructive magnetic resonance micro-imaging (MRMI) in specific regions within lateral buds of poplar under SD/WT dormancing inducing conditions. Under SD/WT, dormancy was associated with restrictions in inter- or intracellular water movement between plant cells that reduces water mobility during dormancy development. Northern ecotypes of dogwood may be more tolerant to photoinhibition under the dormancy inducing LD/LT conditions compared to southern ecotypes. In this paper, we propose the existence of two separate, but temporally connected processes that contribute to dormancy development in some deciduous woody plant: one driven by photoperiod and influenced by moderate temperatures; the other driven by abiotic stresses, such as low temperature in combination with long photoperiods. The molecular changes corresponding to these two related but distinct responses to temperature during dormancy development in woody plants remains an investigative challenge.

176 citations


Authors

Showing all 10964 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Fereidoon Shahidi11995157796
Miao Liu11199359811
Xiang Li97147242301
Eviatar Nevo9584840066
Tim A. McAllister8586232409
Hubert Kolb8442025451
Daniel M. Weary8343722349
Karen A. Beauchemin8342322351
Nanthi Bolan8355031030
Oene Oenema8036123810
Santosh Kumar80119629391
Yueming Jiang7945220563
Denis A. Angers7625619321
Tong Zhu7247218205
Christophe Lacroix6935315860
Network Information
Related Institutions (5)
Agricultural Research Service
58.6K papers, 2.1M citations

95% related

United States Department of Agriculture
90.8K papers, 3.4M citations

92% related

Institut national de la recherche agronomique
68.3K papers, 3.2M citations

90% related

University of Hohenheim
16.4K papers, 567.3K citations

90% related

Wageningen University and Research Centre
54.8K papers, 2.6M citations

89% related

Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202314
202282
20211,078
20201,035
2019992
2018988