Topic
Triticale
About: Triticale is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 4176 publications have been published within this topic receiving 58068 citations. The topic is also known as: × Triticale & triticale.
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TL;DR: Differences in percentage injury between cultivars were significant in both years, but the ranking of cultivars was different due to the favourable water regime in 1977/78, compared with prolonged water stress in 1978/79, and no significant correlation was found between heat tolerance and drought tolerance.
Abstract: In drought tolerance tests on leaf discs from 12 wheat cultivars and one triticale cultivar, using 40% polyethylene glycol-6000 as the osmotic medium, injury due to desiccation ranged from 15.9% in Tanori 71 to 79.6% in Cajeme 71 in 1977/78, and from 11.2% in Yoco (triticale) to 68.7% in Barkaee in 1978/79. Differences in percentage injury between cultivars were significant in both years, but the ranking of cultivars was different due to the favourable water regime in 1977/78, compared with prolonged water stress in 1978/79. In another experiment using eight wheat cultivars, significant cultivar differences in percentage injury were obtained from plants grown under irrigated conditions, where injury was higher than in those from waterstressed plots. No significant cultivar variation was found for the waterstressed plots. In heat-tolerance tests performed at 44 deg C, the percentage heat injury ranged from 14.8% in T. aestivum 'H895' to 77.0% in T. durum 'CD31/75'. No significant correlation was found between heat tolerance and drought tolerance
1,009 citations
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TL;DR: A total of 285 samples representing 51 feedstuffs used in Belgian feed-mills were quantitatively analysed for phytase activity, phytate-P and total P as mentioned in this paper.
534 citations
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01 Oct 1983
TL;DR: Maize (M.M.W. Brown).
Abstract: Maize (M.M. Goodman, C.W. Stuber). Hexaploid wheat (G.E. Hart). Barley (A.H.D. Brown). Rye and triticale (V. Jaaska). Oats (S. Price, A.L. Kahler). Rice (T. Endo, H. Morisha). Tomato (C.M. Rick). Potato (C.L. Desborough). Peppers (M.J. McLeod et al.). Tobacco (S.J. Sheen). Petunia (H.J.W. Wijsmanj). Alfalfa, luzerne (C.F. Quiros). Soybean (Y.T. Kiang, M.B. Gorman). Sunflowers (A.M. Torres). Cole crops (P. Arus, C.R. Shields). Celery and celeriac (T.J. Orton). Cucurbits (F. Dane). Strawberry (S. Arulseka, R.S. Bringhurst). Fruit trees (A.M. Torres). Eucalyptus (G.F. Moran, J.C. Bell). Conifers (J.B. Mitton).
508 citations
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01 Jan 1987
TL;DR: The tribe Triticeae Dumort (Hordeae Benth), a festucoid tribe of the family Poaceae (Gramineae), has long been and still is of great economic importance to humanity and contains three of the major cereals, as well as the recently constructed cereal Triticale.
Abstract: The tribe Triticeae Dumort (Hordeae Benth.), a festucoid tribe of the family Poaceae (Gramineae), has long been and still is of great economic importance to humanity. The tribe contains three of the major cereals — barley, rye and wheat — that have been used since prehistoric times, as well as the recently constructed cereal Triticale. Triticale is a synthetic amphiploid between wheat (Triticum spp.) and rye (Secale spp.) (see Chapter 7). Several other members of the tribe are also important as forage and pasture grasses.
505 citations
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TL;DR: A 2-year field study was conducted using common vetch (Vicia sativa L.), wheat (Triticum aestivum L.), triticale (xTriticosecale Wittmack), barley (Hordeum vulgare L.), and oat (Avena sativa l.) pure stands as well as two commonvetch-cereal mixtures for silage with each of the above four cereals in two seeding ratios (i.e., vetch:cereal 55:45 and 65:35, based on seed
428 citations