Bende is a hard-working, frugal, yet stubborn rural woman. Her husband died when her children were young, and she raised them single-handedly and found a wife for them. This daughter-in-law is also hardworking and filial, and according to her husband's wishes, she prepares delicious meals for her mother-in-law every day. The mother-in-law thus believes that the daughter-in-law is a greedy and extravagant person, which leads to misunderstandings and deepens the conflicts, culminating in the climax of the book. After the son failed to mediate between the two parties, the daughter-in-law followed her husband to work elsewhere, and the story ended. The story is set in rural life in eastern Zhejiang. This book describes the misunderstandings between a mother-in-law and her daughter-in-law living under the same roof due to differences in living habits and concepts, which eventually escalate into conflicts.
One major task of genetic studies is to construct the genetic map through linkage analysis, and then locate the genetic loci of important traits on the constructed linkage maps, identify favorable alleles which are of values to human beings, and investigate their biochemical pathways from genotype to phenotype. This book presents the linkage analysis and gene mapping methodologies, which are applicable to self-pollinated, cross-pollinated, and asexual propagated species, and genetic populations derived from two homozygous parents, two heterozygous parents, and multiple homozygous parents. Chapter 1 in this book begins with genetic mating designs and various types of genetic populations, followed by the structure of commonly used populations and analysis methods of phenotypic data. In chapters 2 and 3, estimation of recombination frequency and construction of linkage map are introduced for twenty bi-parental populations. Chapter 4 deals with two classical gene mapping methods, where no background control is considered, while chapters 5 and 6 describe the inclusive composite interval mapping (ICIM) with background control. Chapter 7 is focused on populations derived from two heterozygous parents, which can be two individuals in a random mating population, two clonal cultivars, or two single crosses from four homozygous inbred lines. Chapter 8 provides knowledge on the pure-line progeny populations derived from four to eight homozygous parents. The last two chapters covers populations, methods and commonly asked questions in genetic mapping which cannot be included previously. This book is intended for readers working on plant and animal genetics, population and quantitative genetics, and plant and animal breeding.
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