A Griffin | University of Tasmania (original) (raw)

Papers by A Griffin

Research paper thumbnail of 7 – Ripening and Dispersal

Research paper thumbnail of Flowering time of Eucalyptus species in their natural habitat

Research paper thumbnail of Clones or improved seedlings of Eucalyptus? Not a simple choice

International Forestry Review, 2014

The industrial use of hybrid eucalypt clones has been hugely successful in Brazil and a limited n... more The industrial use of hybrid eucalypt clones has been hugely successful in Brazil and a limited number of other countries but there are many circumstances where it is less risky and more economically sustainable to plant seedlings. This is particularly true for difficult-to-root pure species and for organizations which do not have the financial and technical resources to manage a sustainable clonal program. Type of planting stock does not add value per se; it is the ultimate return from the harvested crop which matters to growers. Case-by-case analysis of deployment options is recommended, taking into account the growers' objectives; species biology; technical capabilities and budget for R&D; and the scale of nursery production which greatly affects plant unit costs. To assist such decisions pros and cons of clonal forestry are presented together with the technical requirements for clonal and seed production programs and for the middle course of vegetative multiplying tested superior families. Some case study examples are discussed.

Research paper thumbnail of Inbreeding in Pinus radiata III: the effect of inbreeding on age-age correlation and early selection efficiency

Silvae …, 2002

A breeding strategy involving inbreeding followed by crossbreeding of inbreds requires that the p... more A breeding strategy involving inbreeding followed by crossbreeding of inbreds requires that the production of superior inbred lines must be possible, but crosses between lines should exhibit heterosis, inbreeding should not substantially delay reproduction, and early selection between ...

Research paper thumbnail of Using SSR markers for hybrid identification and resource management in Vietnamese Acacia breeding programs

Tree Genetics & Genomes, 2017

Research paper thumbnail of A comparison of fibre and pulp properties of diploid and tetraploid Acacia mangium grown in Vietnam

Appita Journal, 2014

Pulping properties and fibre characteristics of wood from eight-year-old ramets of 6 diploid and ... more Pulping properties and fibre characteristics of wood from eight-year-old ramets of 6 diploid and 5 tetraploid clones of Acacia mangium grown in Vietnam are reported. Individual clones were represented by two or three ramets. While kraft pulp yield at kappa 20 was very similar for diploid and tetraploids clones, tetraploid clones produced pulp with significantly longer (883 μm) and wider (20.0 μm) fibres, compared to the diploid clones (683 μm and 15.6 μm). The tetraploid cell wall thickness was greater, resulting in a coarser pulp. Pulmac fibre strengths of the tetraploid were greater than those of the diploid, although their fibre bonding area was lower. The kraft pulp of the best of the tetraploid clones had higher bulk, porosity and tear strength at constant tensile than pulp from a mix of diploid clones and was similar in these traits to softwood pulp.

Research paper thumbnail of Sexual reproduction of tree crops

Research paper thumbnail of Clonal variation in radiata pine seed orchards. II: Flowering phenology

Australian forest research, 1984

Research paper thumbnail of Strategies for the Genetic Improvement of Yield in Eucalyptus

Biomass Production by Fast-Growing Trees, 1989

The genus Eucalyptus contains about 500 species, all but two of which occur in Australia (latitud... more The genus Eucalyptus contains about 500 species, all but two of which occur in Australia (latitude 10°–44°S). Over 90% of the forests and woodlands of Australia are dominated by eucalypts, whose growth characteristics have evolved in environments where water and nutrients are limiting and fire is a recurrent phenomenon (Turnbull and Boland, 1984). Adaptive physiological characteristics of the genus have recently been reviewed by Eldridge and Cromer (1987).

Research paper thumbnail of A field trial of progeny of trees intermediate between Eucalyptus regnans and E. obliqua

Australian Forest Research, 1980

The progeny of 2 provenances of E. regnans and 1 of E. obliqua were compared with progeny of 4 na... more The progeny of 2 provenances of E. regnans and 1 of E. obliqua were compared with progeny of 4 natural populations whose bark characteristics were intermediate between the 2 species. Assessment to age 15 yr showed that seed from the intermediate ...

Research paper thumbnail of Using Paternity Analysis to Measure Effective Pollen Dispersal in Plant Populations

The American Naturalist, 1992

Paternity analysis can be used to estimate mean effective pollen dispersal (micro(d)) by sampling... more Paternity analysis can be used to estimate mean effective pollen dispersal (micro(d)) by sampling offspring from a mother plant and assaying each for a large number of allozyme loci. The male in the population with the highest likelihood of paternity, based entirely on the degree of genetic relationship with the offspring (transition probability) or combined with information on probability of mating with the mother plant, is inferred as the pollen parent. Computer simulations show that the mean distance between inferred males and mother plants (d) reliably estimates micro(d) in defined circumstances. If male mating success decreases with distance from the mother plant, paternity inference based entirely on transition probabilities results in d values that are upwardly biased, perhaps considerably. More reliable estimates can be obtained in this situation when prior information on the general form of the relationship between mating success and distance between mates (the distance function) is used, along with transition probabilities, to infer paternity. However, this procedure is valid only when the general form of the distance function can be reliably assumed. Computer simulations also show that the bootstrap method can be used to closely approximate the SE of .

Research paper thumbnail of Selfing effects in Eucalyptus regnans

Silvae Genetica, 1983

... 216 Silvae Genetiea, 32, 5—6 -(1663) Page 2. ¡DHK^^HtfS^ifeTjB НгЯЯЬЕзЯаЕ^дввЯ амИюВк^--*аиДс... more ... 216 Silvae Genetiea, 32, 5—6 -(1663) Page 2. ¡DHK^^HtfS^ifeTjB НгЯЯЬЕзЯаЕ^дввЯ амИюВк^--*аиДс I 1 ЁЁШШйЛ ТвГ^'^ьИ Figure 1. — Pollination of tree no. 184 on a roadside near Jeer-alang in 1965 using silk organza bags and sleeves. ...

Research paper thumbnail of The use of random amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD) markers to identify strawberry varieties: a forensic application

Molecular Ecology, 2000

The random amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD) technique was applied to settle a lawsuit involving u... more The random amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD) technique was applied to settle a lawsuit involving unauthorized commercialization of a patented strawberry variety of high economical relevance ('Marmolada'®). Because of economical involvements, the molecular approach was added to the more traditional morphological examination in a double-blind test. All plants belonging to the patented variety were unambiguously identified (13 plants among a total of 31 plants examined). The results were accepted as evidence in the court. This study confirms that the RAPD technique is especially suitable for identification of asexually reproduced plant varieties for forensic or agricultural purposes.

Research paper thumbnail of Strategies for the Genetic Improvement of Yield in Eucalyptus

NATO ASI series. Series E, Applied sciences, 1989

The genus Eucalyptus contains about 500 species, all but two of which occur in Australia (latitud... more The genus Eucalyptus contains about 500 species, all but two of which occur in Australia (latitude 10°–44°S). Over 90% of the forests and woodlands of Australia are dominated by eucalypts, whose growth characteristics have evolved in environments where water and nutrients are limiting and fire is a recurrent phenomenon (Turnbull and Boland, 1984). Adaptive physiological characteristics of the genus have recently been reviewed by Eldridge and Cromer (1987).

Research paper thumbnail of Genetic parameters estimates, selection indices and predicted genetic gains from selection of Eucalyptus globulus in Chile

Research paper thumbnail of Variation in wood characteristics in a field trial of Eucalyptus obliqua, E. regnans and some intermediate forms

Australian forest research, 1978

Takamurayama Chikurinji engi emaki is a two-scroll emaki preserved at Chikurinji, a Shingon templ... more Takamurayama Chikurinji engi emaki is a two-scroll emaki preserved at Chikurinji, a Shingon temple in Nyūno, Hiroshima prefecture, and dated to the Muromachi period. The first scroll of Chikurinji engi begins with the story of the founding of the temple by Gyōki; Ono no Takamura's mysterious birth; and the early stages of Takamura's life as a courtier. This paper focuses on the second of the two scrolls, which recounts the death of Takamura's father-inlaw, his tour through hell, and his encounter there with Takamura, identified as the third of the Ten Kings of Hell. In particular, the paper looks into the development of Takamura's hell-legend, as well as the juxtaposition in the second Chikurinji engi scroll of early medieval motifs of hell with the cult of the Ten Kings. My comparison of the scroll with other medieval Japanese visual and literary sources, such as setsuwa, hell paintings, and sculptures of the Ten Kings and Enma, reveals that the emaki illustrates a representation of the afterworld that is typical of images from the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries.

Research paper thumbnail of Isolation of a radiata pine seed orchard from external pollen

Australian forest research, 1980

Research paper thumbnail of Reduced fertility in triploids of Acacia auriculiformis and its hybrid with A. mangium

Euphytica

Polyploid breeding offers the possibility of increased variability in the search for improved gro... more Polyploid breeding offers the possibility of increased variability in the search for improved growth, site adaptation and disease resistance in tropical acacias. A key focus of breeding in Vietnam has been the production and testing of vigorous triploid clones which are expected to have the added advantage of being sterile. Triploids obtained by manual crosses between diploid and tetraploid trees or by bulk screening of seedlings derived from open-pollinated seedlots were verified using flow cytometry. Thirteen clones are under field testing for growth rate, tree form and fertility. Six of these are now reproductively mature and flowered as prolifically as diploids. However no pollen germinated, either on agar or on their own stigmas under controlled pollination. Only one clone (X01—F1 hybrid of tetraploid A. mangium and diploid A. auriculiformis) produced open pollinated pods on 0.05% of hermaphrodite flowers and these contained an average of 1.3 filled seeds per pod, about one-fifth the number observed in diploids. Less than 25% of germinated progeny from this triploid clone survived at 3 months after sowing and survivors were severely stunted with arrested growth. Ploidy and genotype analysis revealed them to be predominantly aneuploids, ranging from hyperdiploid to hypotetraploid with 95% being selfs. We are confident that we can select triploid clones which will be effectively infertile if deployed in plantations and may be of particular value in situations where the normal prolific natural regeneration of tropical acacias is highly undesirable.

Research paper thumbnail of Effect of inbreeding on production of filled seed in Pinus radiata - experimental results and a model of gene action

TAG. Theoretical and applied genetics. Theoretische und angewandte Genetik, 1985

Pinus radiata D. Don was inbred to different degrees, commencing with a founder population of 8 c... more Pinus radiata D. Don was inbred to different degrees, commencing with a founder population of 8 clones. Yield of filled seed was determined for each mating type. Mean yields (%), relative to outcrossing, were: half-sib 102; full-sib 97; S1 43; S2 42. An epistatic model was developed to predict the empty seed yield following selfing, assuming that homozygosity for several recessive co-lethals is necessary to kill an embryo. Calculations were then extended to predict the yields following different degrees of inbreeding. The proposed model gave a better fit to present results, and to other published results of similar investigations, than did an alternative based on action of independent recessive lethals. Implications for breeding and seed production strategy are discussed.

Research paper thumbnail of Advisory Committee on Forest Research

Research paper thumbnail of 7 – Ripening and Dispersal

Research paper thumbnail of Flowering time of Eucalyptus species in their natural habitat

Research paper thumbnail of Clones or improved seedlings of Eucalyptus? Not a simple choice

International Forestry Review, 2014

The industrial use of hybrid eucalypt clones has been hugely successful in Brazil and a limited n... more The industrial use of hybrid eucalypt clones has been hugely successful in Brazil and a limited number of other countries but there are many circumstances where it is less risky and more economically sustainable to plant seedlings. This is particularly true for difficult-to-root pure species and for organizations which do not have the financial and technical resources to manage a sustainable clonal program. Type of planting stock does not add value per se; it is the ultimate return from the harvested crop which matters to growers. Case-by-case analysis of deployment options is recommended, taking into account the growers' objectives; species biology; technical capabilities and budget for R&D; and the scale of nursery production which greatly affects plant unit costs. To assist such decisions pros and cons of clonal forestry are presented together with the technical requirements for clonal and seed production programs and for the middle course of vegetative multiplying tested superior families. Some case study examples are discussed.

Research paper thumbnail of Inbreeding in Pinus radiata III: the effect of inbreeding on age-age correlation and early selection efficiency

Silvae …, 2002

A breeding strategy involving inbreeding followed by crossbreeding of inbreds requires that the p... more A breeding strategy involving inbreeding followed by crossbreeding of inbreds requires that the production of superior inbred lines must be possible, but crosses between lines should exhibit heterosis, inbreeding should not substantially delay reproduction, and early selection between ...

Research paper thumbnail of Using SSR markers for hybrid identification and resource management in Vietnamese Acacia breeding programs

Tree Genetics & Genomes, 2017

Research paper thumbnail of A comparison of fibre and pulp properties of diploid and tetraploid Acacia mangium grown in Vietnam

Appita Journal, 2014

Pulping properties and fibre characteristics of wood from eight-year-old ramets of 6 diploid and ... more Pulping properties and fibre characteristics of wood from eight-year-old ramets of 6 diploid and 5 tetraploid clones of Acacia mangium grown in Vietnam are reported. Individual clones were represented by two or three ramets. While kraft pulp yield at kappa 20 was very similar for diploid and tetraploids clones, tetraploid clones produced pulp with significantly longer (883 μm) and wider (20.0 μm) fibres, compared to the diploid clones (683 μm and 15.6 μm). The tetraploid cell wall thickness was greater, resulting in a coarser pulp. Pulmac fibre strengths of the tetraploid were greater than those of the diploid, although their fibre bonding area was lower. The kraft pulp of the best of the tetraploid clones had higher bulk, porosity and tear strength at constant tensile than pulp from a mix of diploid clones and was similar in these traits to softwood pulp.

Research paper thumbnail of Sexual reproduction of tree crops

Research paper thumbnail of Clonal variation in radiata pine seed orchards. II: Flowering phenology

Australian forest research, 1984

Research paper thumbnail of Strategies for the Genetic Improvement of Yield in Eucalyptus

Biomass Production by Fast-Growing Trees, 1989

The genus Eucalyptus contains about 500 species, all but two of which occur in Australia (latitud... more The genus Eucalyptus contains about 500 species, all but two of which occur in Australia (latitude 10°–44°S). Over 90% of the forests and woodlands of Australia are dominated by eucalypts, whose growth characteristics have evolved in environments where water and nutrients are limiting and fire is a recurrent phenomenon (Turnbull and Boland, 1984). Adaptive physiological characteristics of the genus have recently been reviewed by Eldridge and Cromer (1987).

Research paper thumbnail of A field trial of progeny of trees intermediate between Eucalyptus regnans and E. obliqua

Australian Forest Research, 1980

The progeny of 2 provenances of E. regnans and 1 of E. obliqua were compared with progeny of 4 na... more The progeny of 2 provenances of E. regnans and 1 of E. obliqua were compared with progeny of 4 natural populations whose bark characteristics were intermediate between the 2 species. Assessment to age 15 yr showed that seed from the intermediate ...

Research paper thumbnail of Using Paternity Analysis to Measure Effective Pollen Dispersal in Plant Populations

The American Naturalist, 1992

Paternity analysis can be used to estimate mean effective pollen dispersal (micro(d)) by sampling... more Paternity analysis can be used to estimate mean effective pollen dispersal (micro(d)) by sampling offspring from a mother plant and assaying each for a large number of allozyme loci. The male in the population with the highest likelihood of paternity, based entirely on the degree of genetic relationship with the offspring (transition probability) or combined with information on probability of mating with the mother plant, is inferred as the pollen parent. Computer simulations show that the mean distance between inferred males and mother plants (d) reliably estimates micro(d) in defined circumstances. If male mating success decreases with distance from the mother plant, paternity inference based entirely on transition probabilities results in d values that are upwardly biased, perhaps considerably. More reliable estimates can be obtained in this situation when prior information on the general form of the relationship between mating success and distance between mates (the distance function) is used, along with transition probabilities, to infer paternity. However, this procedure is valid only when the general form of the distance function can be reliably assumed. Computer simulations also show that the bootstrap method can be used to closely approximate the SE of .

Research paper thumbnail of Selfing effects in Eucalyptus regnans

Silvae Genetica, 1983

... 216 Silvae Genetiea, 32, 5—6 -(1663) Page 2. ¡DHK^^HtfS^ifeTjB НгЯЯЬЕзЯаЕ^дввЯ амИюВк^--*аиДс... more ... 216 Silvae Genetiea, 32, 5—6 -(1663) Page 2. ¡DHK^^HtfS^ifeTjB НгЯЯЬЕзЯаЕ^дввЯ амИюВк^--*аиДс I 1 ЁЁШШйЛ ТвГ^'^ьИ Figure 1. — Pollination of tree no. 184 on a roadside near Jeer-alang in 1965 using silk organza bags and sleeves. ...

Research paper thumbnail of The use of random amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD) markers to identify strawberry varieties: a forensic application

Molecular Ecology, 2000

The random amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD) technique was applied to settle a lawsuit involving u... more The random amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD) technique was applied to settle a lawsuit involving unauthorized commercialization of a patented strawberry variety of high economical relevance ('Marmolada'®). Because of economical involvements, the molecular approach was added to the more traditional morphological examination in a double-blind test. All plants belonging to the patented variety were unambiguously identified (13 plants among a total of 31 plants examined). The results were accepted as evidence in the court. This study confirms that the RAPD technique is especially suitable for identification of asexually reproduced plant varieties for forensic or agricultural purposes.

Research paper thumbnail of Strategies for the Genetic Improvement of Yield in Eucalyptus

NATO ASI series. Series E, Applied sciences, 1989

The genus Eucalyptus contains about 500 species, all but two of which occur in Australia (latitud... more The genus Eucalyptus contains about 500 species, all but two of which occur in Australia (latitude 10°–44°S). Over 90% of the forests and woodlands of Australia are dominated by eucalypts, whose growth characteristics have evolved in environments where water and nutrients are limiting and fire is a recurrent phenomenon (Turnbull and Boland, 1984). Adaptive physiological characteristics of the genus have recently been reviewed by Eldridge and Cromer (1987).

Research paper thumbnail of Genetic parameters estimates, selection indices and predicted genetic gains from selection of Eucalyptus globulus in Chile

Research paper thumbnail of Variation in wood characteristics in a field trial of Eucalyptus obliqua, E. regnans and some intermediate forms

Australian forest research, 1978

Takamurayama Chikurinji engi emaki is a two-scroll emaki preserved at Chikurinji, a Shingon templ... more Takamurayama Chikurinji engi emaki is a two-scroll emaki preserved at Chikurinji, a Shingon temple in Nyūno, Hiroshima prefecture, and dated to the Muromachi period. The first scroll of Chikurinji engi begins with the story of the founding of the temple by Gyōki; Ono no Takamura's mysterious birth; and the early stages of Takamura's life as a courtier. This paper focuses on the second of the two scrolls, which recounts the death of Takamura's father-inlaw, his tour through hell, and his encounter there with Takamura, identified as the third of the Ten Kings of Hell. In particular, the paper looks into the development of Takamura's hell-legend, as well as the juxtaposition in the second Chikurinji engi scroll of early medieval motifs of hell with the cult of the Ten Kings. My comparison of the scroll with other medieval Japanese visual and literary sources, such as setsuwa, hell paintings, and sculptures of the Ten Kings and Enma, reveals that the emaki illustrates a representation of the afterworld that is typical of images from the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries.

Research paper thumbnail of Isolation of a radiata pine seed orchard from external pollen

Australian forest research, 1980

Research paper thumbnail of Reduced fertility in triploids of Acacia auriculiformis and its hybrid with A. mangium

Euphytica

Polyploid breeding offers the possibility of increased variability in the search for improved gro... more Polyploid breeding offers the possibility of increased variability in the search for improved growth, site adaptation and disease resistance in tropical acacias. A key focus of breeding in Vietnam has been the production and testing of vigorous triploid clones which are expected to have the added advantage of being sterile. Triploids obtained by manual crosses between diploid and tetraploid trees or by bulk screening of seedlings derived from open-pollinated seedlots were verified using flow cytometry. Thirteen clones are under field testing for growth rate, tree form and fertility. Six of these are now reproductively mature and flowered as prolifically as diploids. However no pollen germinated, either on agar or on their own stigmas under controlled pollination. Only one clone (X01—F1 hybrid of tetraploid A. mangium and diploid A. auriculiformis) produced open pollinated pods on 0.05% of hermaphrodite flowers and these contained an average of 1.3 filled seeds per pod, about one-fifth the number observed in diploids. Less than 25% of germinated progeny from this triploid clone survived at 3 months after sowing and survivors were severely stunted with arrested growth. Ploidy and genotype analysis revealed them to be predominantly aneuploids, ranging from hyperdiploid to hypotetraploid with 95% being selfs. We are confident that we can select triploid clones which will be effectively infertile if deployed in plantations and may be of particular value in situations where the normal prolific natural regeneration of tropical acacias is highly undesirable.

Research paper thumbnail of Effect of inbreeding on production of filled seed in Pinus radiata - experimental results and a model of gene action

TAG. Theoretical and applied genetics. Theoretische und angewandte Genetik, 1985

Pinus radiata D. Don was inbred to different degrees, commencing with a founder population of 8 c... more Pinus radiata D. Don was inbred to different degrees, commencing with a founder population of 8 clones. Yield of filled seed was determined for each mating type. Mean yields (%), relative to outcrossing, were: half-sib 102; full-sib 97; S1 43; S2 42. An epistatic model was developed to predict the empty seed yield following selfing, assuming that homozygosity for several recessive co-lethals is necessary to kill an embryo. Calculations were then extended to predict the yields following different degrees of inbreeding. The proposed model gave a better fit to present results, and to other published results of similar investigations, than did an alternative based on action of independent recessive lethals. Implications for breeding and seed production strategy are discussed.

Research paper thumbnail of Advisory Committee on Forest Research