T. E. Richardson
Forest Research Institute
8 Papers
149 Citations
T. E. Richardson is an academic researcher from Forest Research Institute. The author has contributed to research in topics: Genetic marker & Pinus radiata. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 8 publications.
Chat about Author
Papers
Characteristics of single- and multi-copy microsatellites from Pinus radiata
TL;DR: Two loci had null alleles and one locus had a high frequency of non-parental alleles, suggesting a high mutation rate, and both single and multi-copy microsatellites exhibited co-dominant inheritance and Mendelian segregation.
102
Inter- and intraspecific polymorphism at chloroplast SSR loci and the inheritance of plastids in Pinus radiata D. Don.
S. A. Cato,T. E. Richardson +1 more
TL;DR: The results suggest that polymorphic chloroplast SSRs will be a valuable tool for studyingchloroplast diversity, cyto-nuclear disequilibrium, and plastid inheritance in a range of species, and for the analysis of gene flow via pollen and paternity in species with paternal transmission of chloroplasts.
92
An allele responsible for seedling death in Pinus radiata D. Don
TL;DR: The identification of an allele responsible for the death of selfed Pinus radiata D. Don seedlings in their first month after germination is reported, and the frequency of band and null alleles in the combined population of dead and surviving seedlings and in un-sown seeds shows no evidence of selection at this locus prior to germination.
24
Genetic analysis of inbreeding depression in plus tree 850.55 of Pinus radiata D. Don. II. Genetics of viability genes
TL;DR: Nine viability genes were discovered in selfed progenies of radiata pine plus tree 850.55; one gene (SDPr), which was responsible for seedling death within the first month following germination, was lethal.
24
Report on the Forest Trees Workshop at the Plant and Animal Genome Conference
TL;DR: This poster presents a probabilistic procedure called “spot-spot analysis” that quantifies the presence of carboniferous material in the stratified areas of New Zealand’s rainforests.