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Institution

Oregon State University

EducationCorvallis, Oregon, United States
About: Oregon State University is a education organization based out in Corvallis, Oregon, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Gene. The organization has 28192 authors who have published 64044 publications receiving 2634108 citations. The organization is also known as: Oregon Agricultural College & OSU.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
John P. Vogel1, David F. Garvin2, Todd C. Mockler2, Jeremy Schmutz, Daniel S. Rokhsar3, Michael W. Bevan4, Kerrie Barry5, Susan Lucas5, Miranda Harmon-Smith5, Kathleen Lail5, Hope Tice5, Jane Grimwood, Neil McKenzie4, Naxin Huo6, Yong Q. Gu6, Gerard R. Lazo6, Olin D. Anderson6, Frank M. You7, Ming-Cheng Luo7, Jan Dvorak7, Jonathan M. Wright4, Melanie Febrer4, Dominika Idziak8, Robert Hasterok8, Erika Lindquist5, Mei Wang5, Samuel E. Fox2, Henry D. Priest2, Sergei A. Filichkin2, Scott A. Givan2, Douglas W. Bryant2, Jeff H. Chang2, Haiyan Wu9, Wei Wu10, An-Ping Hsia10, Patrick S. Schnable9, Anantharaman Kalyanaraman11, Brad Barbazuk12, Todd P. Michael, Samuel P. Hazen13, Jennifer N. Bragg6, Debbie Laudencia-Chingcuanco6, Yiqun Weng14, Georg Haberer, Manuel Spannagl, Klaus F. X. Mayer, Thomas Rattei15, Therese Mitros3, Sang-Jik Lee16, Jocelyn K. C. Rose16, Lukas A. Mueller16, Thomas L. York16, Thomas Wicker17, Jan P. Buchmann17, Jaakko Tanskanen18, Alan H. Schulman18, Heidrun Gundlach, Michael W. Bevan4, Antonio Costa de Oliveira19, Luciano da C. Maia19, William R. Belknap6, Ning Jiang, Jinsheng Lai9, Liucun Zhu20, Jianxin Ma20, Cheng Sun21, Ellen J. Pritham21, Jérôme Salse, Florent Murat, Michael Abrouk, Rémy Bruggmann, Joachim Messing, Noah Fahlgren2, Christopher M. Sullivan2, James C. Carrington2, Elisabeth J. Chapman, Greg D. May22, Jixian Zhai23, Matthias Ganssmann23, Sai Guna Ranjan Gurazada23, Marcelo A German23, Blake C. Meyers23, Pamela J. Green23, Ludmila Tyler3, Jiajie Wu7, James A. Thomson6, Shan Chen13, Henrik Vibe Scheller24, Jesper Harholt25, Peter Ulvskov25, Jeffrey A. Kimbrel2, Laura E. Bartley24, Peijian Cao24, Ki-Hong Jung26, Manoj Sharma24, Miguel E. Vega-Sánchez24, Pamela C. Ronald24, Chris Dardick6, Stefanie De Bodt27, Wim Verelst27, Dirk Inzé27, Maren Heese28, Arp Schnittger28, Xiaohan Yang29, Udaya C. Kalluri29, Gerald A. Tuskan29, Zhihua Hua14, Richard D. Vierstra14, Yu Cui9, Shuhong Ouyang9, Qixin Sun9, Zhiyong Liu9, Alper Yilmaz30, Erich Grotewold30, Richard Sibout31, Kian Hématy31, Grégory Mouille31, Herman Höfte31, Todd P. Michael, Jérôme Pelloux32, Devin O'Connor3, James C. Schnable3, Scott C. Rowe3, Frank G. Harmon3, Cynthia L. Cass33, John C. Sedbrook33, Mary E. Byrne4, Sean Walsh4, Janet Higgins4, Pinghua Li16, Thomas P. Brutnell16, Turgay Unver34, Hikmet Budak34, Harry Belcram, Mathieu Charles, Boulos Chalhoub, Ivan Baxter35 
11 Feb 2010-Nature
TL;DR: The high-quality genome sequence will help Brachypodium reach its potential as an important model system for developing new energy and food crops and establishes a template for analysis of the large genomes of economically important pooid grasses such as wheat.
Abstract: Three subfamilies of grasses, the Ehrhartoideae, Panicoideae and Pooideae, provide the bulk of human nutrition and are poised to become major sources of renewable energy. Here we describe the genome sequence of the wild grass Brachypodium distachyon (Brachypodium), which is, to our knowledge, the first member of the Pooideae subfamily to be sequenced. Comparison of the Brachypodium, rice and sorghum genomes shows a precise history of genome evolution across a broad diversity of the grasses, and establishes a template for analysis of the large genomes of economically important pooid grasses such as wheat. The high-quality genome sequence, coupled with ease of cultivation and transformation, small size and rapid life cycle, will help Brachypodium reach its potential as an important model system for developing new energy and food crops.

1,603 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Here, three modes of adaptation are identified that plants and animals use to survive floods and/or droughts and the rate of evolution in response to flow regime alteration remains an open question.
Abstract: Floods and droughts are important features of most running water ecosystems, but the alteration of natural flow regimes by recent human activities, such as dam building, raises questions related to both evolution and conservation Among organisms inhabiting running waters, what adaptations exist for surviving floods and droughts? How will the alteration of the frequency, timing and duration of flow extremes affect flood- and drought-adapted organisms? How rapidly can populations evolve in response to altered flow regimes? Here, we identify three modes of adaptation (life history, behavioral and morphological) that plants and animals use to survive floods and/or droughts The mode of adaptation that an organism has determines its vulnerability to different kinds of flow regime alteration The rate of evolution in response to flow regime alteration remains an open question Because humans have now altered the flow regimes of most rivers and many streams, understanding the link between fitness and flow regime is crucial for the effective management and restoration of running water ecosystems

1,593 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
23 Jan 2009-Science
TL;DR: Analysis of longitudinal data from unmanaged old forests in the western United States showed that background (noncatastrophic) mortality rates have increased rapidly in recent decades, with doubling periods ranging from 17 to 29 years among regions.
Abstract: Persistent changes in tree mortality rates can alter forest structure, composition, and ecosystem services such as carbon sequestration. Our analyses of longitudinal data from unmanaged old forests in the western United States showed that background (noncatastrophic) mortality rates have increased rapidly in recent decades, with doubling periods ranging from 17 to 29 years among regions. Increases were also pervasive across elevations, tree sizes, dominant genera, and past fire histories. Forest density and basal area declined slightly, which suggests that increasing mortality was not caused by endogenous increases in competition. Because mortality increased in small trees, the overall increase in mortality rates cannot be attributed solely to aging of large trees. Regional warming and consequent increases in water deficits are likely contributors to the increases in tree mortality rates.

1,588 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is concluded that proliferation and diversification of DCL and RDR genes during evolution of plants contributed to specialization of small RNA-directed pathways for development, chromatin structure, and defense.
Abstract: Multicellular eukaryotes produce small RNA molecules (approximately 21–24 nucleotides) of two general types, microRNA (miRNA) and short interfering RNA (siRNA). They collectively function as sequence-specific guides to silence or regulate genes, transposons, and viruses and to modify chromatin and genome structure. Formation or activity of small RNAs requires factors belonging to gene families that encode DICER (or DICER-LIKE [DCL]) and ARGONAUTE proteins and, in the case of some siRNAs, RNA-dependent RNA polymerase (RDR) proteins. Unlike many animals, plants encode multiple DCL and RDR proteins. Using a series of insertion mutants of Arabidopsis thaliana, unique functions for three DCL proteins in miRNA (DCL1), endogenous siRNA (DCL3), and viral siRNA (DCL2) biogenesis were identified. One RDR protein (RDR2) was required for all endogenous siRNAs analyzed. The loss of endogenous siRNA in dcl3 and rdr2 mutants was associated with loss of heterochromatic marks and increased transcript accumulation at some loci. Defects in siRNA-generation activity in response to turnip crinkle virus in dcl2 mutant plants correlated with increased virus susceptibility. We conclude that proliferation and diversification of DCL and RDR genes during evolution of plants contributed to specialization of small RNA-directed pathways for development, chromatin structure, and defense.

1,571 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a stand growth model, called 3-PG (Use of Physiological Principles in Predicting Growth), calculates total carbon fixed (gross primary production; PG) from utilizable, absorbed photosynthetically active radiation (φp.a.u.), obtained by correcting the photosyntically active radiation absorbed by the forest canopy for the effects of soil drought, atmospheric vapour pressure deficits and stand age.

1,548 citations


Authors

Showing all 28447 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Robert Stone1601756167901
Menachem Elimelech15754795285
Thomas J. Smith1401775113919
Harold A. Mooney135450100404
Jerry M. Melillo13438368894
John F. Thompson132142095894
Thomas N. Williams132114595109
Peter M. Vitousek12735296184
Steven W. Running12635576265
Vincenzo Di Marzo12665960240
J. D. Hansen12297576198
Peter Molnar11844653480
Michael R. Hoffmann10950063474
David Pollard10843839550
David J. Hill107136457746
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
2023105
2022377
20213,156
20203,109
20193,017
20182,987