Centre researchers in the Law Team at The University of Queensland have conducted a systematic appraisal of the problems facing researchers within the Centre and in the plant sciences at large. In 2022 the team talked to plant scientists, staff at herbaria, gene banks and botanical gardens to better understand some of the legal issues they face. Based on the
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- Predicting Phenotypes
- Integration of physiology and development of traits underpinning plant success
- Land plant genetic network innovations
- Connecting plant water relations phenotype to whole plant success – Bryophytes
- Connecting plant water relations phenotype to whole plant success
- Domestication underground – exploring how modification of plant hormone signalling, including during plant breeding, influences beneficial plant-microbe symbiosis
- Evolution and function of molecular networks that control potential and water allocation in plant growth
- Impacts of crop domestication on water management
- Model emulation
- Complex mathematical networks
- Discovering new pathways to enhance breeding predictions by integrating genome to phenome and hierarchical biological models
- Mechanism and Network Prediction
- Evolution of eucalyptus clade relative to heat and water stress
- Predicting adaptive trajectories in natural systems
- Phylogenomics of photoperiod response
- Adaptations to heat and water stress in the Andropogoneae grasses
- Leaf cuticle properties
- Homology detection, alignment and ancestral state reconstruction of genetic networks
- Responsible Innovation
- Genomic analysis of mechanisms of adaptive evolution
- Genome manipulation technology development and application to analysis of stress response networks
- Genome editing for complex trait enhancement
- Quantitative biology and the law
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