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- Gregory Reeves - Biography | Gates Cambridge
For my Master’s research, I studied the inheritance of disease resistance and spicy flavor in chile peppers, where I discovered a new gene that inhibits disease resistance, helped sequence the chile pepper genome and broke the world record for "hottest pepper"
- Alumni stories: Greg Reeves | Department of Plant Sciences
Dr Greg Reeves may now be based on the other side of the world, but the roots of his groundbreaking plant science career stretch deep into the glasshouses and labs of Cambridge A PhD student at the Department of Plant Sciences from 2014 to 2018, his research challenged – and ultimately rewrote – a long-held botanical dogma: that monocots
- Gregory Reevess research works | University of Cambridge, Cambridge . . .
Gregory Reeves's 14 research works with 165 citations and 3,161 reads, including: C4 gene induction during de-etiolation evolved through changes in cis to allow integration with
- Gregory Reeves - Google Scholar
University of Cambridge - Cited by 1,933 - plant genetics - plant breeding - photosynthesis - grafting - crop improvement
- New grafting technique published in Nature - Cambridge Enterprise
Dr Greg Reeves, First Author and Gates Cambridge Scholar, Department of Plant Sciences: “I read back over decades of research papers on grafting and everybody said that it couldn’t be done in monocots
- GregReeves (Gregory Reeves) - GitHub
Head of Breeding at the Kiwifruit Breeding Centre in New Zealand, formerly at Plant and Food Research and Cambridge University - GregReeves
- Gregory Reeves Email Phone Number | University of Cambridge PHD . . .
Gregory Reeves, based in Cambridge, Cambridgeshire, United Kingdom, is currently a PHD Graduate Student at University of Cambridge Gregory Reeves brings experience from previous roles at Carnegie Institution for Science, Chile Pepper Institute, New Mexico State University and Seoul National University
- Collaboration across the cohorts - Gates Cambridge
In the world of plant sciences, connections often transcend time, geography and even plant species Such is the case with Greg Reeves and Anoop Tripathi, two Gates Cambridge Scholars from different cohorts who first worked together in the Department of Plant Sciences at the University of Cambridge between 2020 and 2022
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