Zoe Țapu

Zoe Țapu
Born 29 April 1934
Ploiești, Romania
Died 11 February 2013
Ploiești, Romania
Nationality Romanian
Fields Agronomy
Alma mater University of Agronomic Sciences and Veterinary Medicine, Bucharest
Known for Semi-dwarf winter durum wheat
Notable awards Ion Ionescu de la Brad Prize of the Romanian Academy.[1]
Durum wheat (Triticum durum)

Zoe Țapu (born 29 April 1934, Ploiești — died 11 February 2013, Ploiești)[1] was a Romanian agronomist who created an original variety of durum wheat, adapted to the climate in Central and Eastern Europe and other similar regions of the world. She was described as a pioneer of durum wheat breeding in Romania.[1]

Biography

She graduated from the University of Agronomic Sciences and Veterinary Medicine in Bucharest, earning the doctoral degree in agronomic sciences in 1974.[1]

Since 1957 she worked at the newly founded Institute for Maize Breeding, and then at the Research Institute for Cereals and Industrial Crops, from 1962 to 1990, when she retired.[2] In 1980 she received the Ion Ionescu de la Brad Prize of the Romanian Academy for her research on transgressive heredity in winter wheat. She died from heart failure in Ploiești on 11 February 2013.[1]

Scientific achievements

Proving the possibility of obtaining high yield cultivars from parents with low productivity (through heterosis),[3] between 1967 and 1989, Zoe Țapu developed a research program for improving winter durum wheat, in order to obtain cultivars with fall resistance and high yield, using height-reduction genes from summer durum developed at the International Maize and Wheat Improvement Center in Mexico.[4][5][6] In order to achieve that, she used dwarf plants from CIMMYT, which survived to a mild winter, back-crossing them with Romanian durum wheat varieties.[7] Repeated selection for cold resistance of semi-dwarf variants led to the creation of the first semi-dwarf winter durum wheat varieties, Topaz (1977) and Rodur (1984).[8] This new type of wheat set the ground for further progress in durum wheat breeding in many countries.[5]

Patented wheat varieties

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 "In Memoriam". Ferma. 3 (118): 78. March 2013.
  2. INCDA Fundulea – Câteva din rezultate: ameliorare și genetică
  3. Ceapoiu, N. (red.) Grîul, Ed. Academiei, 1984, p. 241
  4. Săulescu N.N. (2003). The Romanian durum breeding program. In Durum Wheat Breeding: Current Approaches and Future Strategies (editors Conxita Royo and Natale Di Fonzo), The Haworth Press, Inc., New York: 907–920. ISBN 9781560229667
  5. 1 2 3 Săulescu N. N., Ittu G., Ittu Mariana, Mustățea P. Cinci decenii de ameliorare a grâului la Fundulea
  6. Woolston J. E. Wheat, barley, and triticale cultivars: A list of publications in which national scientists have noted the cooperation or germplasm they received from CIMMYT, CIMMYT, 1997, p. 78
  7. Crăciun, T., and V. IONESCU-SISEȘTI. "PERFORMANCE OF SOME NEW WINTER WHEAT LINES IN IRRIGATED AND NON—IRRIGATED COMPARATIVE TRIALS." Lucrări științifice: Agronomie 17 (1977): 14.
  8. Verzea M. FIFTY YEARS OF BREEDING IN FIELD CROPS, AT THE NATIONAL AGRICULTURAL RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT INSTITUTE FUNDULEA, ROMANIA ROMANIAN AGRICULTURAL RESEARCH Number 24/2007
  9. Tapu Zoe - Patents observer

See also

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 7/20/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.