2 Works
Data from: Kinetics and mechanism of selenate and selenite removal in solution by sulfate-green rust
Aina Onoguchi, Giuseppe Granata, Daisuke Haraguchi, Hiroshi Hayashi & Chiharu Tokoro
This work investigated the removal of selenite and selenate from water by sulfate-green rust (GR). Selenite was immobilized by simple adsorption onto GR at pH 8, and by adsorption-reduction at pH 9. Selenate was immobilized by adsorption-reduction to selenite and Se0 at both pH 8 and 9. In the process, GR oxidized to goethite and magnetite. The removal of selenite and selenate by GR was kinetically described through a pseudo-second order model based on inductively-coupled...
Data from: Ecology and genomics of an important crop wild relative as a prelude to agricultural innovation
Eric J. B. Von Wettberg, Peter L Chang, Fatma Başdemir, Noelia Carrasquila-Garcia, Lijalem Korbu, Susan M. Moenga, Gashaw Bedada, Alex Greenlon, Ken S. Moriuchi, Vasantika Suryawanshi, Matilde A Cordeiro, Nina V. Noujdina, Kassaye Negash Dinegde, Syed Gul Abbas Shah Sani, Tsegaye Getahun, Lisa Vance, Emily Bergmann, Donna Lindsay, Bullo Erena Mamo, Emily J. Warschefsky, Emmanuel Dacosta-Calheiros, Edward Marques, Mustafa Abdullah Yilmaz, Ahmet Murat Cakmak, Janna Rose … & Douglas R. Cook
Domesticated species are impacted in unintended ways during domestication and breeding. Changes in the nature and intensity of selection impart genetic drift, reduce diversity, and increase the frequency of deleterious alleles. Such outcomes constrain our ability to expand the cultivation of crops into environments that differ from those under which domestication occurred. We address this need in chickpea, an important pulse legume, by harnessing the diversity of wild crop relatives. We document an extreme domestication-related...