Select the tab for the type of search. Each tab has everything you need to do to perform that type of search.

(Results of more than 500 will not return images.)

This search will show only accessions that have material that may be requested, including those not seasonally available.
You may list accessions with separators (commas or semicolons, as shown below) or by entering them on separate lines, such as
PI 651794
PI 651649
PI 651650
When searching a range of accessions, use the Advanced Search tab with the Accession Identifier Range criterion.

The more information you provide, the better the search will be.


Scientific name (any part, no hybrid symbols)

Plant name


Genebank
Country of Origin


Other search criteria:



With genomic data With NCBI link With images Only non-Genetically Engineered

If your results aren't what you expected, try using the Advanced Search tab and filling in more information.
Your query included: All accessions

View Observation Data

Selected item(s) below:


ACCESSIONPLANT NAMETAXONOMYORIGINGENEBANKIMAGEAVAILABILITYRECEIVEDSOURCE TYPESOURCE DATECOLLECTION SITECOORDINATESELEVATIONHABITATIMPROVEMENT LEVELNARRATIVE
0GSOR 312012'Swarna'Oryza sativa L. IndiaGSORPANICLE2010DONATED2011Genetic materialA consortium of NRI funded researchers at Colorado State University, The Institute for Genomic Research, the International Rice Research Institute, Perlegen Sciences, and the Max Planck Institute collaborated on the OryzaSNP Project that involved genome-wide single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) discovery across a unique fraction of the rice genome. This partnership has identified SNPs from across the whole genome of 20 rice cultivars. SNPs are a marker of genetic variation between individuals of species that allow scientists to identify regions of genetic variation that may be linked. Examples of traits that might be linked include plant development, yield, disease resistance, drought tolerance, and nutritional value. Rice is the world's top food crop and principal source of nourishment for nearly half the world's population. By identifying and comparing differences in DNA sequences, the new knowledge will accelerate development of hardier, more productive types of rice, particularly for people in the poorest but fastest growing nations. The consortium released all the SNP data at a public workshop held during the 5th International Symposium of Rice Functional Genomics, October 15-17, 2007, in Tsukuba, Japan. The research team facilitated discussions with participants on how to use the many SNPs generated to forward rice genomics, genetics and breeding.1837895GSOR 312012
1GSOR 312016'Aswina'Oryza sativa L. BangladeshGSOR2010DONATED2011Genetic materialA consortium of NRI funded researchers at Colorado State University, The Institute for Genomic Research, the International Rice Research Institute, Perlegen Sciences, and the Max Planck Institute collaborated on the OryzaSNP Project that involved genome-wide single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) discovery across a unique fraction of the rice genome. This partnership has identified SNPs from across the whole genome of 20 rice cultivars. SNPs are a marker of genetic variation between individuals of species that allow scientists to identify regions of genetic variation that may be linked. Examples of traits that might be linked include plant development, yield, disease resistance, drought tolerance, and nutritional value. Rice is the world's top food crop and principal source of nourishment for nearly half the world's population. By identifying and comparing differences in DNA sequences, the new knowledge will accelerate development of hardier, more productive types of rice, particularly for people in the poorest but fastest growing nations. The consortium released all the SNP data at a public workshop held during the 5th International Symposium of Rice Functional Genomics, October 15-17, 2007, in Tsukuba, Japan. The research team facilitated discussions with participants on how to use the many SNPs generated to forward rice genomics, genetics and breeding.1837899GSOR 312016
2GSOR 312017'Dular'Oryza sativa L. IndiaGSOR2010DONATED2011Genetic materialA consortium of NRI funded researchers at Colorado State University, The Institute for Genomic Research, the International Rice Research Institute, Perlegen Sciences, and the Max Planck Institute collaborated on the OryzaSNP Project that involved genome-wide single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) discovery across a unique fraction of the rice genome. This partnership has identified SNPs from across the whole genome of 20 rice cultivars. SNPs are a marker of genetic variation between individuals of species that allow scientists to identify regions of genetic variation that may be linked. Examples of traits that might be linked include plant development, yield, disease resistance, drought tolerance, and nutritional value. Rice is the world's top food crop and principal source of nourishment for nearly half the world's population. By identifying and comparing differences in DNA sequences, the new knowledge will accelerate development of hardier, more productive types of rice, particularly for people in the poorest but fastest growing nations. The consortium released all the SNP data at a public workshop held during the 5th International Symposium of Rice Functional Genomics, October 15-17, 2007, in Tsukuba, Japan. The research team facilitated discussions with participants on how to use the many SNPs generated to forward rice genomics, genetics and breeding.1837900GSOR 312017
3GSOR 301011BasmatiOryza sativa L. PakistanGSORPANICLE2007DEVELOPED2011Genetic materialTo represent the range of genetic diversity found in cultivated Asian rice, 409 Oryza sativa accessions were selected from around the world. They cover the full geographic and ecological range of rice- from Indonesian paddy terraces, to the harsh upland soils of northern Thailand; from rapidly rising Chinese riverbeds to African mangrove environments. The 409 O. sativa accessions represent all five sub-populations of rice: indica, aus, tropical japonica, temperate japonica and Group V (sometimes called aromatic or basmati) varieties. The diverse set of rice accessions also includes a wide range of important economic phenotypes, including varieties known to be resistant to diseases and insects or tolerant to flooding, drought, high salt concentrations, low mineral nutrition. There are also varieties with varying cooking qualities, such as different grain colors, lengths, textures, and fragrance. The accessions were chosen to build upon several previous studies, including a subset of the varieties used by Garris et al. (2005) to evaluate sub-population structure in O. sativa. Approximately 200 of our accessions overlap with the 3,000 analyzed for diversity within the internationally-funded Generation Challenge Program (GCP) and 159 overlap with the USDA-ARS rice core collection. This Rice Diversity Panel was fingerprinted with 36 simple sequence repeat (SSR) markers and evaluated for 18 agro-morphological traits. The rice diversity panel with the accompanying genetic and phenotypic information provides a valuable foundation for association mapping, understanding the basis of both genotypic and phenotypic differences within and between subpopulations, and rice improvement programs.1882637GSOR 301011
4GSOR 301069JayaOryza sativa L. IndiaGSORPANICLE2007DEVELOPED2011Genetic materialTo represent the range of genetic diversity found in cultivated Asian rice, 409 Oryza sativa accessions were selected from around the world. They cover the full geographic and ecological range of rice- from Indonesian paddy terraces, to the harsh upland soils of northern Thailand; from rapidly rising Chinese riverbeds to African mangrove environments. The 409 O. sativa accessions represent all five sub-populations of rice: indica, aus, tropical japonica, temperate japonica and Group V (sometimes called aromatic or basmati) varieties. The diverse set of rice accessions also includes a wide range of important economic phenotypes, including varieties known to be resistant to diseases and insects or tolerant to flooding, drought, high salt concentrations, low mineral nutrition. There are also varieties with varying cooking qualities, such as different grain colors, lengths, textures, and fragrance. The accessions were chosen to build upon several previous studies, including a subset of the varieties used by Garris et al. (2005) to evaluate sub-population structure in O. sativa. Approximately 200 of our accessions overlap with the 3,000 analyzed for diversity within the internationally-funded Generation Challenge Program (GCP) and 159 overlap with the USDA-ARS rice core collection. This Rice Diversity Panel was fingerprinted with 36 simple sequence repeat (SSR) markers and evaluated for 18 agro-morphological traits. The rice diversity panel with the accompanying genetic and phenotypic information provides a valuable foundation for association mapping, understanding the basis of both genotypic and phenotypic differences within and between subpopulations, and rice improvement programs.1882693GSOR 301069
5GSOR 301070JC149Oryza sativa L. IndiaGSOR2007DEVELOPED2011Genetic materialTo represent the range of genetic diversity found in cultivated Asian rice, 409 Oryza sativa accessions were selected from around the world. They cover the full geographic and ecological range of rice- from Indonesian paddy terraces, to the harsh upland soils of northern Thailand; from rapidly rising Chinese riverbeds to African mangrove environments. The 409 O. sativa accessions represent all five sub-populations of rice: indica, aus, tropical japonica, temperate japonica and Group V (sometimes called aromatic or basmati) varieties. The diverse set of rice accessions also includes a wide range of important economic phenotypes, including varieties known to be resistant to diseases and insects or tolerant to flooding, drought, high salt concentrations, low mineral nutrition. There are also varieties with varying cooking qualities, such as different grain colors, lengths, textures, and fragrance. The accessions were chosen to build upon several previous studies, including a subset of the varieties used by Garris et al. (2005) to evaluate sub-population structure in O. sativa. Approximately 200 of our accessions overlap with the 3,000 analyzed for diversity within the internationally-funded Generation Challenge Program (GCP) and 159 overlap with the USDA-ARS rice core collection. This Rice Diversity Panel was fingerprinted with 36 simple sequence repeat (SSR) markers and evaluated for 18 agro-morphological traits. The rice diversity panel with the accompanying genetic and phenotypic information provides a valuable foundation for association mapping, understanding the basis of both genotypic and phenotypic differences within and between subpopulations, and rice improvement programs.1882694GSOR 301070
6GSOR 301095Luk TakharOryza sativa L. AfghanistanGSORPANICLE2007DEVELOPED2011Genetic materialTo represent the range of genetic diversity found in cultivated Asian rice, 409 Oryza sativa accessions were selected from around the world. They cover the full geographic and ecological range of rice- from Indonesian paddy terraces, to the harsh upland soils of northern Thailand; from rapidly rising Chinese riverbeds to African mangrove environments. The 409 O. sativa accessions represent all five sub-populations of rice: indica, aus, tropical japonica, temperate japonica and Group V (sometimes called aromatic or basmati) varieties. The diverse set of rice accessions also includes a wide range of important economic phenotypes, including varieties known to be resistant to diseases and insects or tolerant to flooding, drought, high salt concentrations, low mineral nutrition. There are also varieties with varying cooking qualities, such as different grain colors, lengths, textures, and fragrance. The accessions were chosen to build upon several previous studies, including a subset of the varieties used by Garris et al. (2005) to evaluate sub-population structure in O. sativa. Approximately 200 of our accessions overlap with the 3,000 analyzed for diversity within the internationally-funded Generation Challenge Program (GCP) and 159 overlap with the USDA-ARS rice core collection. This Rice Diversity Panel was fingerprinted with 36 simple sequence repeat (SSR) markers and evaluated for 18 agro-morphological traits. The rice diversity panel with the accompanying genetic and phenotypic information provides a valuable foundation for association mapping, understanding the basis of both genotypic and phenotypic differences within and between subpopulations, and rice improvement programs.1882719GSOR 301095
7GSOR 301097MehrOryza sativa L. IranGSORPANICLE2007DEVELOPED2011Genetic materialTo represent the range of genetic diversity found in cultivated Asian rice, 409 Oryza sativa accessions were selected from around the world. They cover the full geographic and ecological range of rice- from Indonesian paddy terraces, to the harsh upland soils of northern Thailand; from rapidly rising Chinese riverbeds to African mangrove environments. The 409 O. sativa accessions represent all five sub-populations of rice: indica, aus, tropical japonica, temperate japonica and Group V (sometimes called aromatic or basmati) varieties. The diverse set of rice accessions also includes a wide range of important economic phenotypes, including varieties known to be resistant to diseases and insects or tolerant to flooding, drought, high salt concentrations, low mineral nutrition. There are also varieties with varying cooking qualities, such as different grain colors, lengths, textures, and fragrance. The accessions were chosen to build upon several previous studies, including a subset of the varieties used by Garris et al. (2005) to evaluate sub-population structure in O. sativa. Approximately 200 of our accessions overlap with the 3,000 analyzed for diversity within the internationally-funded Generation Challenge Program (GCP) and 159 overlap with the USDA-ARS rice core collection. This Rice Diversity Panel was fingerprinted with 36 simple sequence repeat (SSR) markers and evaluated for 18 agro-morphological traits. The rice diversity panel with the accompanying genetic and phenotypic information provides a valuable foundation for association mapping, understanding the basis of both genotypic and phenotypic differences within and between subpopulations, and rice improvement programs.1882721GSOR 301097
8GSOR 301123RathuweeOryza sativa L. Sri LankaGSORPANICLE2007DEVELOPED2011Genetic materialTo represent the range of genetic diversity found in cultivated Asian rice, 409 Oryza sativa accessions were selected from around the world. They cover the full geographic and ecological range of rice- from Indonesian paddy terraces, to the harsh upland soils of northern Thailand; from rapidly rising Chinese riverbeds to African mangrove environments. The 409 O. sativa accessions represent all five sub-populations of rice: indica, aus, tropical japonica, temperate japonica and Group V (sometimes called aromatic or basmati) varieties. The diverse set of rice accessions also includes a wide range of important economic phenotypes, including varieties known to be resistant to diseases and insects or tolerant to flooding, drought, high salt concentrations, low mineral nutrition. There are also varieties with varying cooking qualities, such as different grain colors, lengths, textures, and fragrance. The accessions were chosen to build upon several previous studies, including a subset of the varieties used by Garris et al. (2005) to evaluate sub-population structure in O. sativa. Approximately 200 of our accessions overlap with the 3,000 analyzed for diversity within the internationally-funded Generation Challenge Program (GCP) and 159 overlap with the USDA-ARS rice core collection. This Rice Diversity Panel was fingerprinted with 36 simple sequence repeat (SSR) markers and evaluated for 18 agro-morphological traits. The rice diversity panel with the accompanying genetic and phenotypic information provides a valuable foundation for association mapping, understanding the basis of both genotypic and phenotypic differences within and between subpopulations, and rice improvement programs.1882745GSOR 301123
9GSOR 301144T26Oryza sativa L. IndiaGSORPANICLE2007DEVELOPED2011Genetic materialTo represent the range of genetic diversity found in cultivated Asian rice, 409 Oryza sativa accessions were selected from around the world. They cover the full geographic and ecological range of rice- from Indonesian paddy terraces, to the harsh upland soils of northern Thailand; from rapidly rising Chinese riverbeds to African mangrove environments. The 409 O. sativa accessions represent all five sub-populations of rice: indica, aus, tropical japonica, temperate japonica and Group V (sometimes called aromatic or basmati) varieties. The diverse set of rice accessions also includes a wide range of important economic phenotypes, including varieties known to be resistant to diseases and insects or tolerant to flooding, drought, high salt concentrations, low mineral nutrition. There are also varieties with varying cooking qualities, such as different grain colors, lengths, textures, and fragrance. The accessions were chosen to build upon several previous studies, including a subset of the varieties used by Garris et al. (2005) to evaluate sub-population structure in O. sativa. Approximately 200 of our accessions overlap with the 3,000 analyzed for diversity within the internationally-funded Generation Challenge Program (GCP) and 159 overlap with the USDA-ARS rice core collection. This Rice Diversity Panel was fingerprinted with 36 simple sequence repeat (SSR) markers and evaluated for 18 agro-morphological traits. The rice diversity panel with the accompanying genetic and phenotypic information provides a valuable foundation for association mapping, understanding the basis of both genotypic and phenotypic differences within and between subpopulations, and rice improvement programs.1882766GSOR 301144
10GSOR 301169ARC 6578Oryza sativa L. IndiaGSORPANICLE2007DEVELOPED2011Genetic materialTo represent the range of genetic diversity found in cultivated Asian rice, 409 Oryza sativa accessions were selected from around the world. They cover the full geographic and ecological range of rice- from Indonesian paddy terraces, to the harsh upland soils of northern Thailand; from rapidly rising Chinese riverbeds to African mangrove environments. The 409 O. sativa accessions represent all five sub-populations of rice: indica, aus, tropical japonica, temperate japonica and Group V (sometimes called aromatic or basmati) varieties. The diverse set of rice accessions also includes a wide range of important economic phenotypes, including varieties known to be resistant to diseases and insects or tolerant to flooding, drought, high salt concentrations, low mineral nutrition. There are also varieties with varying cooking qualities, such as different grain colors, lengths, textures, and fragrance. The accessions were chosen to build upon several previous studies, including a subset of the varieties used by Garris et al. (2005) to evaluate sub-population structure in O. sativa. Approximately 200 of our accessions overlap with the 3,000 analyzed for diversity within the internationally-funded Generation Challenge Program (GCP) and 159 overlap with the USDA-ARS rice core collection. This Rice Diversity Panel was fingerprinted with 36 simple sequence repeat (SSR) markers and evaluated for 18 agro-morphological traits. The rice diversity panel with the accompanying genetic and phenotypic information provides a valuable foundation for association mapping, understanding the basis of both genotypic and phenotypic differences within and between subpopulations, and rice improvement programs.1882790GSOR 301169
11GSOR 301199SLO 17Oryza sativa L. IndiaGSORPANICLE2007DEVELOPED2011Genetic materialTo represent the range of genetic diversity found in cultivated Asian rice, 409 Oryza sativa accessions were selected from around the world. They cover the full geographic and ecological range of rice- from Indonesian paddy terraces, to the harsh upland soils of northern Thailand; from rapidly rising Chinese riverbeds to African mangrove environments. The 409 O. sativa accessions represent all five sub-populations of rice: indica, aus, tropical japonica, temperate japonica and Group V (sometimes called aromatic or basmati) varieties. The diverse set of rice accessions also includes a wide range of important economic phenotypes, including varieties known to be resistant to diseases and insects or tolerant to flooding, drought, high salt concentrations, low mineral nutrition. There are also varieties with varying cooking qualities, such as different grain colors, lengths, textures, and fragrance. The accessions were chosen to build upon several previous studies, including a subset of the varieties used by Garris et al. (2005) to evaluate sub-population structure in O. sativa. Approximately 200 of our accessions overlap with the 3,000 analyzed for diversity within the internationally-funded Generation Challenge Program (GCP) and 159 overlap with the USDA-ARS rice core collection. This Rice Diversity Panel was fingerprinted with 36 simple sequence repeat (SSR) markers and evaluated for 18 agro-morphological traits. The rice diversity panel with the accompanying genetic and phenotypic information provides a valuable foundation for association mapping, understanding the basis of both genotypic and phenotypic differences within and between subpopulations, and rice improvement programs.1882819GSOR 301199
12GSOR 301201ThavaluOryza sativa L. Sri LankaGSORPANICLE2007DEVELOPED2011Genetic materialTo represent the range of genetic diversity found in cultivated Asian rice, 409 Oryza sativa accessions were selected from around the world. They cover the full geographic and ecological range of rice- from Indonesian paddy terraces, to the harsh upland soils of northern Thailand; from rapidly rising Chinese riverbeds to African mangrove environments. The 409 O. sativa accessions represent all five sub-populations of rice: indica, aus, tropical japonica, temperate japonica and Group V (sometimes called aromatic or basmati) varieties. The diverse set of rice accessions also includes a wide range of important economic phenotypes, including varieties known to be resistant to diseases and insects or tolerant to flooding, drought, high salt concentrations, low mineral nutrition. There are also varieties with varying cooking qualities, such as different grain colors, lengths, textures, and fragrance. The accessions were chosen to build upon several previous studies, including a subset of the varieties used by Garris et al. (2005) to evaluate sub-population structure in O. sativa. Approximately 200 of our accessions overlap with the 3,000 analyzed for diversity within the internationally-funded Generation Challenge Program (GCP) and 159 overlap with the USDA-ARS rice core collection. This Rice Diversity Panel was fingerprinted with 36 simple sequence repeat (SSR) markers and evaluated for 18 agro-morphological traits. The rice diversity panel with the accompanying genetic and phenotypic information provides a valuable foundation for association mapping, understanding the basis of both genotypic and phenotypic differences within and between subpopulations, and rice improvement programs.1882821GSOR 301201
13GSOR 301251Shim BalteOryza sativa L. IraqGSORPANICLE2007DEVELOPED2011Genetic materialTo represent the range of genetic diversity found in cultivated Asian rice, 409 Oryza sativa accessions were selected from around the world. They cover the full geographic and ecological range of rice- from Indonesian paddy terraces, to the harsh upland soils of northern Thailand; from rapidly rising Chinese riverbeds to African mangrove environments. The 409 O. sativa accessions represent all five sub-populations of rice: indica, aus, tropical japonica, temperate japonica and Group V (sometimes called aromatic or basmati) varieties. The diverse set of rice accessions also includes a wide range of important economic phenotypes, including varieties known to be resistant to diseases and insects or tolerant to flooding, drought, high salt concentrations, low mineral nutrition. There are also varieties with varying cooking qualities, such as different grain colors, lengths, textures, and fragrance. The accessions were chosen to build upon several previous studies, including a subset of the varieties used by Garris et al. (2005) to evaluate sub-population structure in O. sativa. Approximately 200 of our accessions overlap with the 3,000 analyzed for diversity within the internationally-funded Generation Challenge Program (GCP) and 159 overlap with the USDA-ARS rice core collection. This Rice Diversity Panel was fingerprinted with 36 simple sequence repeat (SSR) markers and evaluated for 18 agro-morphological traits. The rice diversity panel with the accompanying genetic and phenotypic information provides a valuable foundation for association mapping, understanding the basis of both genotypic and phenotypic differences within and between subpopulations, and rice improvement programs.1882870GSOR 301251
14GSOR 301252Halwa Gose RedOryza sativa L. IraqGSORPANICLE2007DEVELOPED2011Genetic materialTo represent the range of genetic diversity found in cultivated Asian rice, 409 Oryza sativa accessions were selected from around the world. They cover the full geographic and ecological range of rice- from Indonesian paddy terraces, to the harsh upland soils of northern Thailand; from rapidly rising Chinese riverbeds to African mangrove environments. The 409 O. sativa accessions represent all five sub-populations of rice: indica, aus, tropical japonica, temperate japonica and Group V (sometimes called aromatic or basmati) varieties. The diverse set of rice accessions also includes a wide range of important economic phenotypes, including varieties known to be resistant to diseases and insects or tolerant to flooding, drought, high salt concentrations, low mineral nutrition. There are also varieties with varying cooking qualities, such as different grain colors, lengths, textures, and fragrance. The accessions were chosen to build upon several previous studies, including a subset of the varieties used by Garris et al. (2005) to evaluate sub-population structure in O. sativa. Approximately 200 of our accessions overlap with the 3,000 analyzed for diversity within the internationally-funded Generation Challenge Program (GCP) and 159 overlap with the USDA-ARS rice core collection. This Rice Diversity Panel was fingerprinted with 36 simple sequence repeat (SSR) markers and evaluated for 18 agro-morphological traits. The rice diversity panel with the accompanying genetic and phenotypic information provides a valuable foundation for association mapping, understanding the basis of both genotypic and phenotypic differences within and between subpopulations, and rice improvement programs.1882871GSOR 301252
15GSOR 301274IR-44595Oryza sativa L. NepalGSORPANICLE2007DEVELOPED2011Genetic materialTo represent the range of genetic diversity found in cultivated Asian rice, 409 Oryza sativa accessions were selected from around the world. They cover the full geographic and ecological range of rice- from Indonesian paddy terraces, to the harsh upland soils of northern Thailand; from rapidly rising Chinese riverbeds to African mangrove environments. The 409 O. sativa accessions represent all five sub-populations of rice: indica, aus, tropical japonica, temperate japonica and Group V (sometimes called aromatic or basmati) varieties. The diverse set of rice accessions also includes a wide range of important economic phenotypes, including varieties known to be resistant to diseases and insects or tolerant to flooding, drought, high salt concentrations, low mineral nutrition. There are also varieties with varying cooking qualities, such as different grain colors, lengths, textures, and fragrance. The accessions were chosen to build upon several previous studies, including a subset of the varieties used by Garris et al. (2005) to evaluate sub-population structure in O. sativa. Approximately 200 of our accessions overlap with the 3,000 analyzed for diversity within the internationally-funded Generation Challenge Program (GCP) and 159 overlap with the USDA-ARS rice core collection. This Rice Diversity Panel was fingerprinted with 36 simple sequence repeat (SSR) markers and evaluated for 18 agro-morphological traits. The rice diversity panel with the accompanying genetic and phenotypic information provides a valuable foundation for association mapping, understanding the basis of both genotypic and phenotypic differences within and between subpopulations, and rice improvement programs.1882893GSOR 301274
16GSOR 301288LD 24Oryza sativa L. Sri LankaGSORPANICLE2007DEVELOPED2011Genetic materialTo represent the range of genetic diversity found in cultivated Asian rice, 409 Oryza sativa accessions were selected from around the world. They cover the full geographic and ecological range of rice- from Indonesian paddy terraces, to the harsh upland soils of northern Thailand; from rapidly rising Chinese riverbeds to African mangrove environments. The 409 O. sativa accessions represent all five sub-populations of rice: indica, aus, tropical japonica, temperate japonica and Group V (sometimes called aromatic or basmati) varieties. The diverse set of rice accessions also includes a wide range of important economic phenotypes, including varieties known to be resistant to diseases and insects or tolerant to flooding, drought, high salt concentrations, low mineral nutrition. There are also varieties with varying cooking qualities, such as different grain colors, lengths, textures, and fragrance. The accessions were chosen to build upon several previous studies, including a subset of the varieties used by Garris et al. (2005) to evaluate sub-population structure in O. sativa. Approximately 200 of our accessions overlap with the 3,000 analyzed for diversity within the internationally-funded Generation Challenge Program (GCP) and 159 overlap with the USDA-ARS rice core collection. This Rice Diversity Panel was fingerprinted with 36 simple sequence repeat (SSR) markers and evaluated for 18 agro-morphological traits. The rice diversity panel with the accompanying genetic and phenotypic information provides a valuable foundation for association mapping, understanding the basis of both genotypic and phenotypic differences within and between subpopulations, and rice improvement programs.1882907GSOR 301288
17GSOR 301303BR24Oryza sativa L. BangladeshGSORPANICLE2007DEVELOPED2011Genetic materialTo represent the range of genetic diversity found in cultivated Asian rice, 409 Oryza sativa accessions were selected from around the world. They cover the full geographic and ecological range of rice- from Indonesian paddy terraces, to the harsh upland soils of northern Thailand; from rapidly rising Chinese riverbeds to African mangrove environments. The 409 O. sativa accessions represent all five sub-populations of rice: indica, aus, tropical japonica, temperate japonica and Group V (sometimes called aromatic or basmati) varieties. The diverse set of rice accessions also includes a wide range of important economic phenotypes, including varieties known to be resistant to diseases and insects or tolerant to flooding, drought, high salt concentrations, low mineral nutrition. There are also varieties with varying cooking qualities, such as different grain colors, lengths, textures, and fragrance. The accessions were chosen to build upon several previous studies, including a subset of the varieties used by Garris et al. (2005) to evaluate sub-population structure in O. sativa. Approximately 200 of our accessions overlap with the 3,000 analyzed for diversity within the internationally-funded Generation Challenge Program (GCP) and 159 overlap with the USDA-ARS rice core collection. This Rice Diversity Panel was fingerprinted with 36 simple sequence repeat (SSR) markers and evaluated for 18 agro-morphological traits. The rice diversity panel with the accompanying genetic and phenotypic information provides a valuable foundation for association mapping, understanding the basis of both genotypic and phenotypic differences within and between subpopulations, and rice improvement programs.1882922GSOR 301303
18GSOR 301304CTG 1516Oryza sativa L. BangladeshGSORPANICLE2007DEVELOPED2011Genetic materialTo represent the range of genetic diversity found in cultivated Asian rice, 409 Oryza sativa accessions were selected from around the world. They cover the full geographic and ecological range of rice- from Indonesian paddy terraces, to the harsh upland soils of northern Thailand; from rapidly rising Chinese riverbeds to African mangrove environments. The 409 O. sativa accessions represent all five sub-populations of rice: indica, aus, tropical japonica, temperate japonica and Group V (sometimes called aromatic or basmati) varieties. The diverse set of rice accessions also includes a wide range of important economic phenotypes, including varieties known to be resistant to diseases and insects or tolerant to flooding, drought, high salt concentrations, low mineral nutrition. There are also varieties with varying cooking qualities, such as different grain colors, lengths, textures, and fragrance. The accessions were chosen to build upon several previous studies, including a subset of the varieties used by Garris et al. (2005) to evaluate sub-population structure in O. sativa. Approximately 200 of our accessions overlap with the 3,000 analyzed for diversity within the internationally-funded Generation Challenge Program (GCP) and 159 overlap with the USDA-ARS rice core collection. This Rice Diversity Panel was fingerprinted with 36 simple sequence repeat (SSR) markers and evaluated for 18 agro-morphological traits. The rice diversity panel with the accompanying genetic and phenotypic information provides a valuable foundation for association mapping, understanding the basis of both genotypic and phenotypic differences within and between subpopulations, and rice improvement programs.1882923GSOR 301304
19GSOR 301305DawebyanOryza sativa L. MyanmarGSORPANICLE2007DEVELOPED2011Genetic materialTo represent the range of genetic diversity found in cultivated Asian rice, 409 Oryza sativa accessions were selected from around the world. They cover the full geographic and ecological range of rice- from Indonesian paddy terraces, to the harsh upland soils of northern Thailand; from rapidly rising Chinese riverbeds to African mangrove environments. The 409 O. sativa accessions represent all five sub-populations of rice: indica, aus, tropical japonica, temperate japonica and Group V (sometimes called aromatic or basmati) varieties. The diverse set of rice accessions also includes a wide range of important economic phenotypes, including varieties known to be resistant to diseases and insects or tolerant to flooding, drought, high salt concentrations, low mineral nutrition. There are also varieties with varying cooking qualities, such as different grain colors, lengths, textures, and fragrance. The accessions were chosen to build upon several previous studies, including a subset of the varieties used by Garris et al. (2005) to evaluate sub-population structure in O. sativa. Approximately 200 of our accessions overlap with the 3,000 analyzed for diversity within the internationally-funded Generation Challenge Program (GCP) and 159 overlap with the USDA-ARS rice core collection. This Rice Diversity Panel was fingerprinted with 36 simple sequence repeat (SSR) markers and evaluated for 18 agro-morphological traits. The rice diversity panel with the accompanying genetic and phenotypic information provides a valuable foundation for association mapping, understanding the basis of both genotypic and phenotypic differences within and between subpopulations, and rice improvement programs.1882924GSOR 301305
20GSOR 301312DM 59Oryza sativa L. BangladeshGSORPANICLE2007DEVELOPED2011Genetic materialTo represent the range of genetic diversity found in cultivated Asian rice, 409 Oryza sativa accessions were selected from around the world. They cover the full geographic and ecological range of rice- from Indonesian paddy terraces, to the harsh upland soils of northern Thailand; from rapidly rising Chinese riverbeds to African mangrove environments. The 409 O. sativa accessions represent all five sub-populations of rice: indica, aus, tropical japonica, temperate japonica and Group V (sometimes called aromatic or basmati) varieties. The diverse set of rice accessions also includes a wide range of important economic phenotypes, including varieties known to be resistant to diseases and insects or tolerant to flooding, drought, high salt concentrations, low mineral nutrition. There are also varieties with varying cooking qualities, such as different grain colors, lengths, textures, and fragrance. The accessions were chosen to build upon several previous studies, including a subset of the varieties used by Garris et al. (2005) to evaluate sub-population structure in O. sativa. Approximately 200 of our accessions overlap with the 3,000 analyzed for diversity within the internationally-funded Generation Challenge Program (GCP) and 159 overlap with the USDA-ARS rice core collection. This Rice Diversity Panel was fingerprinted with 36 simple sequence repeat (SSR) markers and evaluated for 18 agro-morphological traits. The rice diversity panel with the accompanying genetic and phenotypic information provides a valuable foundation for association mapping, understanding the basis of both genotypic and phenotypic differences within and between subpopulations, and rice improvement programs.1882931GSOR 301312
21GSOR 301313DNJ 140Oryza sativa L. BangladeshGSORPANICLE2007DEVELOPED2011Genetic materialTo represent the range of genetic diversity found in cultivated Asian rice, 409 Oryza sativa accessions were selected from around the world. They cover the full geographic and ecological range of rice- from Indonesian paddy terraces, to the harsh upland soils of northern Thailand; from rapidly rising Chinese riverbeds to African mangrove environments. The 409 O. sativa accessions represent all five sub-populations of rice: indica, aus, tropical japonica, temperate japonica and Group V (sometimes called aromatic or basmati) varieties. The diverse set of rice accessions also includes a wide range of important economic phenotypes, including varieties known to be resistant to diseases and insects or tolerant to flooding, drought, high salt concentrations, low mineral nutrition. There are also varieties with varying cooking qualities, such as different grain colors, lengths, textures, and fragrance. The accessions were chosen to build upon several previous studies, including a subset of the varieties used by Garris et al. (2005) to evaluate sub-population structure in O. sativa. Approximately 200 of our accessions overlap with the 3,000 analyzed for diversity within the internationally-funded Generation Challenge Program (GCP) and 159 overlap with the USDA-ARS rice core collection. This Rice Diversity Panel was fingerprinted with 36 simple sequence repeat (SSR) markers and evaluated for 18 agro-morphological traits. The rice diversity panel with the accompanying genetic and phenotypic information provides a valuable foundation for association mapping, understanding the basis of both genotypic and phenotypic differences within and between subpopulations, and rice improvement programs.1882932GSOR 301313
22GSOR 301315EMATA A 16-34Oryza sativa L. MyanmarGSORPANICLE2007DEVELOPED2011Genetic materialTo represent the range of genetic diversity found in cultivated Asian rice, 409 Oryza sativa accessions were selected from around the world. They cover the full geographic and ecological range of rice- from Indonesian paddy terraces, to the harsh upland soils of northern Thailand; from rapidly rising Chinese riverbeds to African mangrove environments. The 409 O. sativa accessions represent all five sub-populations of rice: indica, aus, tropical japonica, temperate japonica and Group V (sometimes called aromatic or basmati) varieties. The diverse set of rice accessions also includes a wide range of important economic phenotypes, including varieties known to be resistant to diseases and insects or tolerant to flooding, drought, high salt concentrations, low mineral nutrition. There are also varieties with varying cooking qualities, such as different grain colors, lengths, textures, and fragrance. The accessions were chosen to build upon several previous studies, including a subset of the varieties used by Garris et al. (2005) to evaluate sub-population structure in O. sativa. Approximately 200 of our accessions overlap with the 3,000 analyzed for diversity within the internationally-funded Generation Challenge Program (GCP) and 159 overlap with the USDA-ARS rice core collection. This Rice Diversity Panel was fingerprinted with 36 simple sequence repeat (SSR) markers and evaluated for 18 agro-morphological traits. The rice diversity panel with the accompanying genetic and phenotypic information provides a valuable foundation for association mapping, understanding the basis of both genotypic and phenotypic differences within and between subpopulations, and rice improvement programs.1882934GSOR 301315
23GSOR 301316GhorbhaiOryza sativa L. BangladeshGSORPANICLE2007DEVELOPED2011Genetic materialTo represent the range of genetic diversity found in cultivated Asian rice, 409 Oryza sativa accessions were selected from around the world. They cover the full geographic and ecological range of rice- from Indonesian paddy terraces, to the harsh upland soils of northern Thailand; from rapidly rising Chinese riverbeds to African mangrove environments. The 409 O. sativa accessions represent all five sub-populations of rice: indica, aus, tropical japonica, temperate japonica and Group V (sometimes called aromatic or basmati) varieties. The diverse set of rice accessions also includes a wide range of important economic phenotypes, including varieties known to be resistant to diseases and insects or tolerant to flooding, drought, high salt concentrations, low mineral nutrition. There are also varieties with varying cooking qualities, such as different grain colors, lengths, textures, and fragrance. The accessions were chosen to build upon several previous studies, including a subset of the varieties used by Garris et al. (2005) to evaluate sub-population structure in O. sativa. Approximately 200 of our accessions overlap with the 3,000 analyzed for diversity within the internationally-funded Generation Challenge Program (GCP) and 159 overlap with the USDA-ARS rice core collection. This Rice Diversity Panel was fingerprinted with 36 simple sequence repeat (SSR) markers and evaluated for 18 agro-morphological traits. The rice diversity panel with the accompanying genetic and phenotypic information provides a valuable foundation for association mapping, understanding the basis of both genotypic and phenotypic differences within and between subpopulations, and rice improvement programs.1882935GSOR 301316
24GSOR 301317GoriaOryza sativa L. BangladeshGSORPANICLE2007DEVELOPED2011Genetic materialTo represent the range of genetic diversity found in cultivated Asian rice, 409 Oryza sativa accessions were selected from around the world. They cover the full geographic and ecological range of rice- from Indonesian paddy terraces, to the harsh upland soils of northern Thailand; from rapidly rising Chinese riverbeds to African mangrove environments. The 409 O. sativa accessions represent all five sub-populations of rice: indica, aus, tropical japonica, temperate japonica and Group V (sometimes called aromatic or basmati) varieties. The diverse set of rice accessions also includes a wide range of important economic phenotypes, including varieties known to be resistant to diseases and insects or tolerant to flooding, drought, high salt concentrations, low mineral nutrition. There are also varieties with varying cooking qualities, such as different grain colors, lengths, textures, and fragrance. The accessions were chosen to build upon several previous studies, including a subset of the varieties used by Garris et al. (2005) to evaluate sub-population structure in O. sativa. Approximately 200 of our accessions overlap with the 3,000 analyzed for diversity within the internationally-funded Generation Challenge Program (GCP) and 159 overlap with the USDA-ARS rice core collection. This Rice Diversity Panel was fingerprinted with 36 simple sequence repeat (SSR) markers and evaluated for 18 agro-morphological traits. The rice diversity panel with the accompanying genetic and phenotypic information provides a valuable foundation for association mapping, understanding the basis of both genotypic and phenotypic differences within and between subpopulations, and rice improvement programs.1882936GSOR 301317
25GSOR 301318JamirOryza sativa L. BangladeshGSORPANICLE2007DEVELOPED2011Genetic materialTo represent the range of genetic diversity found in cultivated Asian rice, 409 Oryza sativa accessions were selected from around the world. They cover the full geographic and ecological range of rice- from Indonesian paddy terraces, to the harsh upland soils of northern Thailand; from rapidly rising Chinese riverbeds to African mangrove environments. The 409 O. sativa accessions represent all five sub-populations of rice: indica, aus, tropical japonica, temperate japonica and Group V (sometimes called aromatic or basmati) varieties. The diverse set of rice accessions also includes a wide range of important economic phenotypes, including varieties known to be resistant to diseases and insects or tolerant to flooding, drought, high salt concentrations, low mineral nutrition. There are also varieties with varying cooking qualities, such as different grain colors, lengths, textures, and fragrance. The accessions were chosen to build upon several previous studies, including a subset of the varieties used by Garris et al. (2005) to evaluate sub-population structure in O. sativa. Approximately 200 of our accessions overlap with the 3,000 analyzed for diversity within the internationally-funded Generation Challenge Program (GCP) and 159 overlap with the USDA-ARS rice core collection. This Rice Diversity Panel was fingerprinted with 36 simple sequence repeat (SSR) markers and evaluated for 18 agro-morphological traits. The rice diversity panel with the accompanying genetic and phenotypic information provides a valuable foundation for association mapping, understanding the basis of both genotypic and phenotypic differences within and between subpopulations, and rice improvement programs.1882937GSOR 301318
26GSOR 301319KachilonOryza sativa L. BangladeshGSORPANICLE2007DEVELOPED2011Genetic materialTo represent the range of genetic diversity found in cultivated Asian rice, 409 Oryza sativa accessions were selected from around the world. They cover the full geographic and ecological range of rice- from Indonesian paddy terraces, to the harsh upland soils of northern Thailand; from rapidly rising Chinese riverbeds to African mangrove environments. The 409 O. sativa accessions represent all five sub-populations of rice: indica, aus, tropical japonica, temperate japonica and Group V (sometimes called aromatic or basmati) varieties. The diverse set of rice accessions also includes a wide range of important economic phenotypes, including varieties known to be resistant to diseases and insects or tolerant to flooding, drought, high salt concentrations, low mineral nutrition. There are also varieties with varying cooking qualities, such as different grain colors, lengths, textures, and fragrance. The accessions were chosen to build upon several previous studies, including a subset of the varieties used by Garris et al. (2005) to evaluate sub-population structure in O. sativa. Approximately 200 of our accessions overlap with the 3,000 analyzed for diversity within the internationally-funded Generation Challenge Program (GCP) and 159 overlap with the USDA-ARS rice core collection. This Rice Diversity Panel was fingerprinted with 36 simple sequence repeat (SSR) markers and evaluated for 18 agro-morphological traits. The rice diversity panel with the accompanying genetic and phenotypic information provides a valuable foundation for association mapping, understanding the basis of both genotypic and phenotypic differences within and between subpopulations, and rice improvement programs.1882938GSOR 301319
27GSOR 301326Paung MalaungOryza sativa L. MyanmarGSORPANICLE2007DEVELOPED2011Genetic materialTo represent the range of genetic diversity found in cultivated Asian rice, 409 Oryza sativa accessions were selected from around the world. They cover the full geographic and ecological range of rice- from Indonesian paddy terraces, to the harsh upland soils of northern Thailand; from rapidly rising Chinese riverbeds to African mangrove environments. The 409 O. sativa accessions represent all five sub-populations of rice: indica, aus, tropical japonica, temperate japonica and Group V (sometimes called aromatic or basmati) varieties. The diverse set of rice accessions also includes a wide range of important economic phenotypes, including varieties known to be resistant to diseases and insects or tolerant to flooding, drought, high salt concentrations, low mineral nutrition. There are also varieties with varying cooking qualities, such as different grain colors, lengths, textures, and fragrance. The accessions were chosen to build upon several previous studies, including a subset of the varieties used by Garris et al. (2005) to evaluate sub-population structure in O. sativa. Approximately 200 of our accessions overlap with the 3,000 analyzed for diversity within the internationally-funded Generation Challenge Program (GCP) and 159 overlap with the USDA-ARS rice core collection. This Rice Diversity Panel was fingerprinted with 36 simple sequence repeat (SSR) markers and evaluated for 18 agro-morphological traits. The rice diversity panel with the accompanying genetic and phenotypic information provides a valuable foundation for association mapping, understanding the basis of both genotypic and phenotypic differences within and between subpopulations, and rice improvement programs.1882945GSOR 301326
28GSOR 301328SitpwaOryza sativa L. MyanmarGSORPANICLE2007DEVELOPED2011Genetic materialTo represent the range of genetic diversity found in cultivated Asian rice, 409 Oryza sativa accessions were selected from around the world. They cover the full geographic and ecological range of rice- from Indonesian paddy terraces, to the harsh upland soils of northern Thailand; from rapidly rising Chinese riverbeds to African mangrove environments. The 409 O. sativa accessions represent all five sub-populations of rice: indica, aus, tropical japonica, temperate japonica and Group V (sometimes called aromatic or basmati) varieties. The diverse set of rice accessions also includes a wide range of important economic phenotypes, including varieties known to be resistant to diseases and insects or tolerant to flooding, drought, high salt concentrations, low mineral nutrition. There are also varieties with varying cooking qualities, such as different grain colors, lengths, textures, and fragrance. The accessions were chosen to build upon several previous studies, including a subset of the varieties used by Garris et al. (2005) to evaluate sub-population structure in O. sativa. Approximately 200 of our accessions overlap with the 3,000 analyzed for diversity within the internationally-funded Generation Challenge Program (GCP) and 159 overlap with the USDA-ARS rice core collection. This Rice Diversity Panel was fingerprinted with 36 simple sequence repeat (SSR) markers and evaluated for 18 agro-morphological traits. The rice diversity panel with the accompanying genetic and phenotypic information provides a valuable foundation for association mapping, understanding the basis of both genotypic and phenotypic differences within and between subpopulations, and rice improvement programs.1882947GSOR 301328
29GSOR 301329YodanyaOryza sativa L. MyanmarGSORPANICLE2007DEVELOPED2011Genetic materialTo represent the range of genetic diversity found in cultivated Asian rice, 409 Oryza sativa accessions were selected from around the world. They cover the full geographic and ecological range of rice- from Indonesian paddy terraces, to the harsh upland soils of northern Thailand; from rapidly rising Chinese riverbeds to African mangrove environments. The 409 O. sativa accessions represent all five sub-populations of rice: indica, aus, tropical japonica, temperate japonica and Group V (sometimes called aromatic or basmati) varieties. The diverse set of rice accessions also includes a wide range of important economic phenotypes, including varieties known to be resistant to diseases and insects or tolerant to flooding, drought, high salt concentrations, low mineral nutrition. There are also varieties with varying cooking qualities, such as different grain colors, lengths, textures, and fragrance. The accessions were chosen to build upon several previous studies, including a subset of the varieties used by Garris et al. (2005) to evaluate sub-population structure in O. sativa. Approximately 200 of our accessions overlap with the 3,000 analyzed for diversity within the internationally-funded Generation Challenge Program (GCP) and 159 overlap with the USDA-ARS rice core collection. This Rice Diversity Panel was fingerprinted with 36 simple sequence repeat (SSR) markers and evaluated for 18 agro-morphological traits. The rice diversity panel with the accompanying genetic and phenotypic information provides a valuable foundation for association mapping, understanding the basis of both genotypic and phenotypic differences within and between subpopulations, and rice improvement programs.1882948GSOR 301329
30GSOR 301331ShirkatiOryza sativa L. AfghanistanGSORPANICLE2007DEVELOPED2011Genetic materialTo represent the range of genetic diversity found in cultivated Asian rice, 409 Oryza sativa accessions were selected from around the world. They cover the full geographic and ecological range of rice- from Indonesian paddy terraces, to the harsh upland soils of northern Thailand; from rapidly rising Chinese riverbeds to African mangrove environments. The 409 O. sativa accessions represent all five sub-populations of rice: indica, aus, tropical japonica, temperate japonica and Group V (sometimes called aromatic or basmati) varieties. The diverse set of rice accessions also includes a wide range of important economic phenotypes, including varieties known to be resistant to diseases and insects or tolerant to flooding, drought, high salt concentrations, low mineral nutrition. There are also varieties with varying cooking qualities, such as different grain colors, lengths, textures, and fragrance. The accessions were chosen to build upon several previous studies, including a subset of the varieties used by Garris et al. (2005) to evaluate sub-population structure in O. sativa. Approximately 200 of our accessions overlap with the 3,000 analyzed for diversity within the internationally-funded Generation Challenge Program (GCP) and 159 overlap with the USDA-ARS rice core collection. This Rice Diversity Panel was fingerprinted with 36 simple sequence repeat (SSR) markers and evaluated for 18 agro-morphological traits. The rice diversity panel with the accompanying genetic and phenotypic information provides a valuable foundation for association mapping, understanding the basis of both genotypic and phenotypic differences within and between subpopulations, and rice improvement programs.1882950GSOR 301331
31GSOR 301335DZ 193Oryza sativa L. BangladeshGSORPANICLE2007DEVELOPED2011Genetic materialTo represent the range of genetic diversity found in cultivated Asian rice, 409 Oryza sativa accessions were selected from around the world. They cover the full geographic and ecological range of rice- from Indonesian paddy terraces, to the harsh upland soils of northern Thailand; from rapidly rising Chinese riverbeds to African mangrove environments. The 409 O. sativa accessions represent all five sub-populations of rice: indica, aus, tropical japonica, temperate japonica and Group V (sometimes called aromatic or basmati) varieties. The diverse set of rice accessions also includes a wide range of important economic phenotypes, including varieties known to be resistant to diseases and insects or tolerant to flooding, drought, high salt concentrations, low mineral nutrition. There are also varieties with varying cooking qualities, such as different grain colors, lengths, textures, and fragrance. The accessions were chosen to build upon several previous studies, including a subset of the varieties used by Garris et al. (2005) to evaluate sub-population structure in O. sativa. Approximately 200 of our accessions overlap with the 3,000 analyzed for diversity within the internationally-funded Generation Challenge Program (GCP) and 159 overlap with the USDA-ARS rice core collection. This Rice Diversity Panel was fingerprinted with 36 simple sequence repeat (SSR) markers and evaluated for 18 agro-morphological traits. The rice diversity panel with the accompanying genetic and phenotypic information provides a valuable foundation for association mapping, understanding the basis of both genotypic and phenotypic differences within and between subpopulations, and rice improvement programs.1882954GSOR 301335
32GSOR 301336Karkati 87Oryza sativa L. BangladeshGSORPANICLE2007DEVELOPED2011Genetic materialTo represent the range of genetic diversity found in cultivated Asian rice, 409 Oryza sativa accessions were selected from around the world. They cover the full geographic and ecological range of rice- from Indonesian paddy terraces, to the harsh upland soils of northern Thailand; from rapidly rising Chinese riverbeds to African mangrove environments. The 409 O. sativa accessions represent all five sub-populations of rice: indica, aus, tropical japonica, temperate japonica and Group V (sometimes called aromatic or basmati) varieties. The diverse set of rice accessions also includes a wide range of important economic phenotypes, including varieties known to be resistant to diseases and insects or tolerant to flooding, drought, high salt concentrations, low mineral nutrition. There are also varieties with varying cooking qualities, such as different grain colors, lengths, textures, and fragrance. The accessions were chosen to build upon several previous studies, including a subset of the varieties used by Garris et al. (2005) to evaluate sub-population structure in O. sativa. Approximately 200 of our accessions overlap with the 3,000 analyzed for diversity within the internationally-funded Generation Challenge Program (GCP) and 159 overlap with the USDA-ARS rice core collection. This Rice Diversity Panel was fingerprinted with 36 simple sequence repeat (SSR) markers and evaluated for 18 agro-morphological traits. The rice diversity panel with the accompanying genetic and phenotypic information provides a valuable foundation for association mapping, understanding the basis of both genotypic and phenotypic differences within and between subpopulations, and rice improvement programs.1882955GSOR 301336
33GSOR 301341ARC 10376Oryza sativa L. IndiaGSORPANICLE2007DEVELOPED2011Genetic materialTo represent the range of genetic diversity found in cultivated Asian rice, 409 Oryza sativa accessions were selected from around the world. They cover the full geographic and ecological range of rice- from Indonesian paddy terraces, to the harsh upland soils of northern Thailand; from rapidly rising Chinese riverbeds to African mangrove environments. The 409 O. sativa accessions represent all five sub-populations of rice: indica, aus, tropical japonica, temperate japonica and Group V (sometimes called aromatic or basmati) varieties. The diverse set of rice accessions also includes a wide range of important economic phenotypes, including varieties known to be resistant to diseases and insects or tolerant to flooding, drought, high salt concentrations, low mineral nutrition. There are also varieties with varying cooking qualities, such as different grain colors, lengths, textures, and fragrance. The accessions were chosen to build upon several previous studies, including a subset of the varieties used by Garris et al. (2005) to evaluate sub-population structure in O. sativa. Approximately 200 of our accessions overlap with the 3,000 analyzed for diversity within the internationally-funded Generation Challenge Program (GCP) and 159 overlap with the USDA-ARS rice core collection. This Rice Diversity Panel was fingerprinted with 36 simple sequence repeat (SSR) markers and evaluated for 18 agro-morphological traits. The rice diversity panel with the accompanying genetic and phenotypic information provides a valuable foundation for association mapping, understanding the basis of both genotypic and phenotypic differences within and between subpopulations, and rice improvement programs.1882960GSOR 301341
34GSOR 301342BALAOryza sativa L. IndiaGSORPANICLE2007DEVELOPED2011Genetic materialTo represent the range of genetic diversity found in cultivated Asian rice, 409 Oryza sativa accessions were selected from around the world. They cover the full geographic and ecological range of rice- from Indonesian paddy terraces, to the harsh upland soils of northern Thailand; from rapidly rising Chinese riverbeds to African mangrove environments. The 409 O. sativa accessions represent all five sub-populations of rice: indica, aus, tropical japonica, temperate japonica and Group V (sometimes called aromatic or basmati) varieties. The diverse set of rice accessions also includes a wide range of important economic phenotypes, including varieties known to be resistant to diseases and insects or tolerant to flooding, drought, high salt concentrations, low mineral nutrition. There are also varieties with varying cooking qualities, such as different grain colors, lengths, textures, and fragrance. The accessions were chosen to build upon several previous studies, including a subset of the varieties used by Garris et al. (2005) to evaluate sub-population structure in O. sativa. Approximately 200 of our accessions overlap with the 3,000 analyzed for diversity within the internationally-funded Generation Challenge Program (GCP) and 159 overlap with the USDA-ARS rice core collection. This Rice Diversity Panel was fingerprinted with 36 simple sequence repeat (SSR) markers and evaluated for 18 agro-morphological traits. The rice diversity panel with the accompanying genetic and phenotypic information provides a valuable foundation for association mapping, understanding the basis of both genotypic and phenotypic differences within and between subpopulations, and rice improvement programs.1882961GSOR 301342
35GSOR 301343ASD 1Oryza sativa L. IndiaGSORPANICLE2007DEVELOPED2011Genetic materialTo represent the range of genetic diversity found in cultivated Asian rice, 409 Oryza sativa accessions were selected from around the world. They cover the full geographic and ecological range of rice- from Indonesian paddy terraces, to the harsh upland soils of northern Thailand; from rapidly rising Chinese riverbeds to African mangrove environments. The 409 O. sativa accessions represent all five sub-populations of rice: indica, aus, tropical japonica, temperate japonica and Group V (sometimes called aromatic or basmati) varieties. The diverse set of rice accessions also includes a wide range of important economic phenotypes, including varieties known to be resistant to diseases and insects or tolerant to flooding, drought, high salt concentrations, low mineral nutrition. There are also varieties with varying cooking qualities, such as different grain colors, lengths, textures, and fragrance. The accessions were chosen to build upon several previous studies, including a subset of the varieties used by Garris et al. (2005) to evaluate sub-population structure in O. sativa. Approximately 200 of our accessions overlap with the 3,000 analyzed for diversity within the internationally-funded Generation Challenge Program (GCP) and 159 overlap with the USDA-ARS rice core collection. This Rice Diversity Panel was fingerprinted with 36 simple sequence repeat (SSR) markers and evaluated for 18 agro-morphological traits. The rice diversity panel with the accompanying genetic and phenotypic information provides a valuable foundation for association mapping, understanding the basis of both genotypic and phenotypic differences within and between subpopulations, and rice improvement programs.1882962GSOR 301343
36GSOR 301344JC 117Oryza sativa L. IndiaGSORPANICLE2007DEVELOPED2011Genetic materialTo represent the range of genetic diversity found in cultivated Asian rice, 409 Oryza sativa accessions were selected from around the world. They cover the full geographic and ecological range of rice- from Indonesian paddy terraces, to the harsh upland soils of northern Thailand; from rapidly rising Chinese riverbeds to African mangrove environments. The 409 O. sativa accessions represent all five sub-populations of rice: indica, aus, tropical japonica, temperate japonica and Group V (sometimes called aromatic or basmati) varieties. The diverse set of rice accessions also includes a wide range of important economic phenotypes, including varieties known to be resistant to diseases and insects or tolerant to flooding, drought, high salt concentrations, low mineral nutrition. There are also varieties with varying cooking qualities, such as different grain colors, lengths, textures, and fragrance. The accessions were chosen to build upon several previous studies, including a subset of the varieties used by Garris et al. (2005) to evaluate sub-population structure in O. sativa. Approximately 200 of our accessions overlap with the 3,000 analyzed for diversity within the internationally-funded Generation Challenge Program (GCP) and 159 overlap with the USDA-ARS rice core collection. This Rice Diversity Panel was fingerprinted with 36 simple sequence repeat (SSR) markers and evaluated for 18 agro-morphological traits. The rice diversity panel with the accompanying genetic and phenotypic information provides a valuable foundation for association mapping, understanding the basis of both genotypic and phenotypic differences within and between subpopulations, and rice improvement programs.1882963GSOR 301344
37GSOR 3013459524Oryza sativa L. IndiaGSORPANICLE2007DEVELOPED2011Genetic materialTo represent the range of genetic diversity found in cultivated Asian rice, 409 Oryza sativa accessions were selected from around the world. They cover the full geographic and ecological range of rice- from Indonesian paddy terraces, to the harsh upland soils of northern Thailand; from rapidly rising Chinese riverbeds to African mangrove environments. The 409 O. sativa accessions represent all five sub-populations of rice: indica, aus, tropical japonica, temperate japonica and Group V (sometimes called aromatic or basmati) varieties. The diverse set of rice accessions also includes a wide range of important economic phenotypes, including varieties known to be resistant to diseases and insects or tolerant to flooding, drought, high salt concentrations, low mineral nutrition. There are also varieties with varying cooking qualities, such as different grain colors, lengths, textures, and fragrance. The accessions were chosen to build upon several previous studies, including a subset of the varieties used by Garris et al. (2005) to evaluate sub-population structure in O. sativa. Approximately 200 of our accessions overlap with the 3,000 analyzed for diversity within the internationally-funded Generation Challenge Program (GCP) and 159 overlap with the USDA-ARS rice core collection. This Rice Diversity Panel was fingerprinted with 36 simple sequence repeat (SSR) markers and evaluated for 18 agro-morphological traits. The rice diversity panel with the accompanying genetic and phenotypic information provides a valuable foundation for association mapping, understanding the basis of both genotypic and phenotypic differences within and between subpopulations, and rice improvement programs.1882964GSOR 301345
38GSOR 301356SathiOryza sativa L. PakistanGSORPANICLE2007DEVELOPED2011Genetic materialTo represent the range of genetic diversity found in cultivated Asian rice, 409 Oryza sativa accessions were selected from around the world. They cover the full geographic and ecological range of rice- from Indonesian paddy terraces, to the harsh upland soils of northern Thailand; from rapidly rising Chinese riverbeds to African mangrove environments. The 409 O. sativa accessions represent all five sub-populations of rice: indica, aus, tropical japonica, temperate japonica and Group V (sometimes called aromatic or basmati) varieties. The diverse set of rice accessions also includes a wide range of important economic phenotypes, including varieties known to be resistant to diseases and insects or tolerant to flooding, drought, high salt concentrations, low mineral nutrition. There are also varieties with varying cooking qualities, such as different grain colors, lengths, textures, and fragrance. The accessions were chosen to build upon several previous studies, including a subset of the varieties used by Garris et al. (2005) to evaluate sub-population structure in O. sativa. Approximately 200 of our accessions overlap with the 3,000 analyzed for diversity within the internationally-funded Generation Challenge Program (GCP) and 159 overlap with the USDA-ARS rice core collection. This Rice Diversity Panel was fingerprinted with 36 simple sequence repeat (SSR) markers and evaluated for 18 agro-morphological traits. The rice diversity panel with the accompanying genetic and phenotypic information provides a valuable foundation for association mapping, understanding the basis of both genotypic and phenotypic differences within and between subpopulations, and rice improvement programs.1882974GSOR 301356
39GSOR 301357CoarseOryza sativa L. PakistanGSORPANICLE2007DEVELOPED2011Genetic materialTo represent the range of genetic diversity found in cultivated Asian rice, 409 Oryza sativa accessions were selected from around the world. They cover the full geographic and ecological range of rice- from Indonesian paddy terraces, to the harsh upland soils of northern Thailand; from rapidly rising Chinese riverbeds to African mangrove environments. The 409 O. sativa accessions represent all five sub-populations of rice: indica, aus, tropical japonica, temperate japonica and Group V (sometimes called aromatic or basmati) varieties. The diverse set of rice accessions also includes a wide range of important economic phenotypes, including varieties known to be resistant to diseases and insects or tolerant to flooding, drought, high salt concentrations, low mineral nutrition. There are also varieties with varying cooking qualities, such as different grain colors, lengths, textures, and fragrance. The accessions were chosen to build upon several previous studies, including a subset of the varieties used by Garris et al. (2005) to evaluate sub-population structure in O. sativa. Approximately 200 of our accessions overlap with the 3,000 analyzed for diversity within the internationally-funded Generation Challenge Program (GCP) and 159 overlap with the USDA-ARS rice core collection. This Rice Diversity Panel was fingerprinted with 36 simple sequence repeat (SSR) markers and evaluated for 18 agro-morphological traits. The rice diversity panel with the accompanying genetic and phenotypic information provides a valuable foundation for association mapping, understanding the basis of both genotypic and phenotypic differences within and between subpopulations, and rice improvement programs.1882975GSOR 301357
40GSOR 301359SufaidOryza sativa L. PakistanGSORPANICLE2007DEVELOPED2011Genetic materialTo represent the range of genetic diversity found in cultivated Asian rice, 409 Oryza sativa accessions were selected from around the world. They cover the full geographic and ecological range of rice- from Indonesian paddy terraces, to the harsh upland soils of northern Thailand; from rapidly rising Chinese riverbeds to African mangrove environments. The 409 O. sativa accessions represent all five sub-populations of rice: indica, aus, tropical japonica, temperate japonica and Group V (sometimes called aromatic or basmati) varieties. The diverse set of rice accessions also includes a wide range of important economic phenotypes, including varieties known to be resistant to diseases and insects or tolerant to flooding, drought, high salt concentrations, low mineral nutrition. There are also varieties with varying cooking qualities, such as different grain colors, lengths, textures, and fragrance. The accessions were chosen to build upon several previous studies, including a subset of the varieties used by Garris et al. (2005) to evaluate sub-population structure in O. sativa. Approximately 200 of our accessions overlap with the 3,000 analyzed for diversity within the internationally-funded Generation Challenge Program (GCP) and 159 overlap with the USDA-ARS rice core collection. This Rice Diversity Panel was fingerprinted with 36 simple sequence repeat (SSR) markers and evaluated for 18 agro-morphological traits. The rice diversity panel with the accompanying genetic and phenotypic information provides a valuable foundation for association mapping, understanding the basis of both genotypic and phenotypic differences within and between subpopulations, and rice improvement programs.1882977GSOR 301359
41GSOR 301363Kalubala VeeOryza sativa L. Sri LankaGSORPANICLE2007DEVELOPED2011Genetic materialTo represent the range of genetic diversity found in cultivated Asian rice, 409 Oryza sativa accessions were selected from around the world. They cover the full geographic and ecological range of rice- from Indonesian paddy terraces, to the harsh upland soils of northern Thailand; from rapidly rising Chinese riverbeds to African mangrove environments. The 409 O. sativa accessions represent all five sub-populations of rice: indica, aus, tropical japonica, temperate japonica and Group V (sometimes called aromatic or basmati) varieties. The diverse set of rice accessions also includes a wide range of important economic phenotypes, including varieties known to be resistant to diseases and insects or tolerant to flooding, drought, high salt concentrations, low mineral nutrition. There are also varieties with varying cooking qualities, such as different grain colors, lengths, textures, and fragrance. The accessions were chosen to build upon several previous studies, including a subset of the varieties used by Garris et al. (2005) to evaluate sub-population structure in O. sativa. Approximately 200 of our accessions overlap with the 3,000 analyzed for diversity within the internationally-funded Generation Challenge Program (GCP) and 159 overlap with the USDA-ARS rice core collection. This Rice Diversity Panel was fingerprinted with 36 simple sequence repeat (SSR) markers and evaluated for 18 agro-morphological traits. The rice diversity panel with the accompanying genetic and phenotypic information provides a valuable foundation for association mapping, understanding the basis of both genotypic and phenotypic differences within and between subpopulations, and rice improvement programs.1882981GSOR 301363
42GSOR 301382Baguamon 14Oryza sativa L. BangladeshGSORPANICLE2007DEVELOPED2011Genetic materialTo represent the range of genetic diversity found in cultivated Asian rice, 409 Oryza sativa accessions were selected from around the world. They cover the full geographic and ecological range of rice- from Indonesian paddy terraces, to the harsh upland soils of northern Thailand; from rapidly rising Chinese riverbeds to African mangrove environments. The 409 O. sativa accessions represent all five sub-populations of rice: indica, aus, tropical japonica, temperate japonica and Group V (sometimes called aromatic or basmati) varieties. The diverse set of rice accessions also includes a wide range of important economic phenotypes, including varieties known to be resistant to diseases and insects or tolerant to flooding, drought, high salt concentrations, low mineral nutrition. There are also varieties with varying cooking qualities, such as different grain colors, lengths, textures, and fragrance. The accessions were chosen to build upon several previous studies, including a subset of the varieties used by Garris et al. (2005) to evaluate sub-population structure in O. sativa. Approximately 200 of our accessions overlap with the 3,000 analyzed for diversity within the internationally-funded Generation Challenge Program (GCP) and 159 overlap with the USDA-ARS rice core collection. This Rice Diversity Panel was fingerprinted with 36 simple sequence repeat (SSR) markers and evaluated for 18 agro-morphological traits. The rice diversity panel with the accompanying genetic and phenotypic information provides a valuable foundation for association mapping, understanding the basis of both genotypic and phenotypic differences within and between subpopulations, and rice improvement programs.1883000GSOR 301382
43GSOR 301390Pankhari 203Oryza sativa L. IndiaGSORPANICLE2007DEVELOPED2011Genetic materialTo represent the range of genetic diversity found in cultivated Asian rice, 409 Oryza sativa accessions were selected from around the world. They cover the full geographic and ecological range of rice- from Indonesian paddy terraces, to the harsh upland soils of northern Thailand; from rapidly rising Chinese riverbeds to African mangrove environments. The 409 O. sativa accessions represent all five sub-populations of rice: indica, aus, tropical japonica, temperate japonica and Group V (sometimes called aromatic or basmati) varieties. The diverse set of rice accessions also includes a wide range of important economic phenotypes, including varieties known to be resistant to diseases and insects or tolerant to flooding, drought, high salt concentrations, low mineral nutrition. There are also varieties with varying cooking qualities, such as different grain colors, lengths, textures, and fragrance. The accessions were chosen to build upon several previous studies, including a subset of the varieties used by Garris et al. (2005) to evaluate sub-population structure in O. sativa. Approximately 200 of our accessions overlap with the 3,000 analyzed for diversity within the internationally-funded Generation Challenge Program (GCP) and 159 overlap with the USDA-ARS rice core collection. This Rice Diversity Panel was fingerprinted with 36 simple sequence repeat (SSR) markers and evaluated for 18 agro-morphological traits. The rice diversity panel with the accompanying genetic and phenotypic information provides a valuable foundation for association mapping, understanding the basis of both genotypic and phenotypic differences within and between subpopulations, and rice improvement programs.1883005GSOR 301390