1. Viewpoint: Evolution of cultivated chickpea: four bottlenecks limit diversity andconstrain adaptation
2. Vernalization response of wild chickpea
3. Detection of ribosomal DNA sites in lentil and chickpea by fluorescent in situ hybridization
4. Abbo, S. et al., Breeding for osmotic adjustment in chickpea (Cicer arietinum L.). InProceedings of the 12th Australian Plant Breeding Conference, McComb, J.A., Ed., Australian Plant Breeding Association, Perth, Australia, 463, 2002b.
5. Ahmad, F., Interspecific hybridization and genetic relationships among the annual Cicer L. species, Ph.D. Thesis,University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, 1988.