Author:
Devos Yann,De Schrijver Adinda,Reheul Dirk
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Pollution,General Environmental Science,General Medicine
Reference129 articles.
1. Adler, L. S., Wikler, K., Wyndham, F. S., Linder, C. R., & Schmitt, J. (1993). Potential for persistence of genes escaped from canola: Germination cues in crops, wild, and crop–wild hybrid Brassica rapa. Functional Ecology, 7, 736–745.
2. Al Mouemar, A., & Darmency, H. (2004). Lack of stable inheritance of introgressed transgene from oilseed rape in wild radish. Environmental Biosafety Research, 3, 209–214.
3. Allainguillaume, J., Alexander, M., Bullock, J. M., Saunders, M., Allender, C. J., King, G., et al. (2006). Fitness of hybrids between rapeseed (Brassica napus) and wild Brassica rapa in natural habitats. Molecular Ecology, 15, 1175–1184.
4. Ammann, K., Jacot, Y., & Al Mazyad, P. R. (2001). Safety of genetically engineered plants: An ecological risk assessment of vertical gene flow. In R. Custers (Ed.), Safety of genetically engineered crops (pp. 60–87). Ghent: Flanders Interuniversity Institute for Biotechnology.
5. Ammitzbøll, H., Mikkelsen, T. N., & Jørgensen, R. B. (2005). Transgene expression and fitness of hybrids between oilseed rape and Brassica rapa. Environmental Biosafety Research, 4, 3–12.