johninnessvc.wordpress.com
The curse of the four-year PhD – John Innes SVC
https://johninnessvc.wordpress.com/2015/03/09/th-curse-of-the-four-year-phd
About the authors, past and present. About the Student Voice. About the authors, past and present. About the Student Voice. The curse of the four-year PhD. March 9, 2015. March 9, 2015. Here in the UK, most research council-funded PhD students will have a thesis deadline four years after their start date. As someone who moved straight from undergraduate to postgraduate study with no breaks, this means I will be a doctor by age 25. Then you begin the process of actually trying to get published: submission...
johninnessvc.wordpress.com
Five answers to the question ‘why plants?’ – John Innes SVC
https://johninnessvc.wordpress.com/2015/02/25/five-answers-to-the-question-why-plants
About the authors, past and present. About the Student Voice. About the authors, past and present. About the Student Voice. Five answers to the question ‘why plants? February 25, 2015. February 27, 2015. This month, Erica wrote about the growing presence of science in the public domain. And how this can only be a good thing. However, although chemistry and physics traditionally considered ‘geeky’ subjects have grown in popularity, the plant sciences are lagging behind. It is able to incorporate chlorophy...
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Videos – John Innes SVC
https://johninnessvc.wordpress.com/videos
About the authors, past and present. About the Student Voice. About the authors, past and present. About the Student Voice. This video by Mike Rugen and Ellis O’Neill has been entered into a Royal Society of Chemistry competition. Please vote at http:/ www.rsc.org/science-activities/human-health/take-1-competition/videos.asp. An Overview of the NoCaSS conference. A student run conference as a collaboration between the JIC and Cambridge University Plant Sciences Department. Leave a Reply Cancel reply.
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Five answers to the question ‘why microbes?’ – John Innes SVC
https://johninnessvc.wordpress.com/2015/03/27/five-answers-to-the-question-why-microbes
About the authors, past and present. About the Student Voice. About the authors, past and present. About the Student Voice. Five answers to the question ‘why microbes? March 27, 2015. March 27, 2015. Last month, Amelia gave us five great reasons to love plants. But plants aren’t the only species worked on at the John Innes Centre that lack the respect they deserve. I thought it was only fair to come up with my own ‘five answers’. The world is facing a crisis:. Found in the soil. Trenches or the guts of i...
johninnessvc.wordpress.com
Six things I learned at my first conference – John Innes SVC
https://johninnessvc.wordpress.com/2015/05/25/six-things-i-learned-at-my-first-conference
About the authors, past and present. About the Student Voice. About the authors, past and present. About the Student Voice. May 25, 2015. May 24, 2015. Six things I learned at my first conference. Last month I had the opportunity, together with some of my MSc classmates, to attend the annual meeting of Monogram. A network of UK-based researchers and breeders of small grain cereals and grasses. The 2015 event took place at Rothamsted Research. A leading research centre in plant and soil science. I also go...
johninnessvc.wordpress.com
Galleries – John Innes SVC
https://johninnessvc.wordpress.com/galleries
About the authors, past and present. About the Student Voice. About the authors, past and present. About the Student Voice. Christmas at JIC 2014. Christmas tree at the John Innes Centre reception. Christmas tree in the John Innes Centre’s sports hall. Department of Cell and Developmental Biology’s Christmas tree. Christmas tree at the John Innes Centre Conference Centre. Advent calendar village in the Coen lab. Christmas tree at the John Innes Recreation Centre. Christmas decorations at JIC. You are com...
whenplantsfightback.wordpress.com
Defintions | When Plants Fight Back
https://whenplantsfightback.wordpress.com/defintions
When Plants Fight Back. A blog dedicated to cereal killers. What’s That Header? While I intend to make this site accessible to a wide range of people there are lots of terms out there, if you’re struggling with them (and don’t want to ask) I recommend looking here:. Http:/ www.apsnet.org/edcenter/illglossary/Pages/default.aspx. This is a glossary by the American Pathology Society and might be a good place to start looking. Leave a Reply Cancel reply. Enter your comment here. Teaching New Plants Old Tricks.
whenplantsfightback.wordpress.com
Some Things Never Change: Introducing Receptors Could Improve Defence. | When Plants Fight Back
https://whenplantsfightback.wordpress.com/2015/03/31/some-things-never-change-introducing-receptors-could-improve-defence
When Plants Fight Back. A blog dedicated to cereal killers. What’s That Header? Project: Cotyledon Mash and the Fat Lazy Pathogen. Some Things Never Change: Introducing Receptors Could Improve Defence. March 31, 2015. Flowering plants are divided into two major groups (the monocots and dicots) which split apart 150 million years ago. Schoonbeek. Show that a receptor can be moved from. Dicot) into rice (a monocot), and this can make the rice more resistant to disease. This defence response is known as PAM...
whenplantsfightback.wordpress.com
The Hero Within? | When Plants Fight Back
https://whenplantsfightback.wordpress.com/2015/03/03/guest-post
When Plants Fight Back. A blog dedicated to cereal killers. What’s That Header? Teaching New Plants Old Tricks. Project: Cotyledon Mash and the Fat Lazy Pathogen →. March 3, 2015. Not all microbes are bad. Recently the importance of the microbes in the guts of humans is becoming clear, but it’s not just animals that benefit from the microbes inside of them- so do plants, and these microbes could have potential in farming. Bacterial endophytes in the root of a plant. Barley, globally the fourth most impor...