@article{williams_stuber_goodman_1995, title={Comparative recombination distances for maize inbreds, wide crosses and interspecific hybrids}, number={69}, journal={Maize Genetics Cooperation Newsletter}, author={Williams, C. G. and Stuber, C. W. and Goodman, M. M.}, year={1995}, pages={116} } @article{williams_stuber_goodman_1995, title={Desynaptic (dy) mutant reduces crossover recovery on chromosome 1L}, number={69}, journal={Maize Genetics Cooperation Newsletter}, author={Williams, C. G. and Stuber, C. W. and Goodman, M. M.}, year={1995}, pages={116} } @article{williams_hamrick_lewis_1995, title={Multiple-population versus hierarchical conifer breeding programs: A comparison of genetic diversity levels}, volume={90}, number={3}, journal={Theoretical and Applied Genetics}, author={Williams, C. G. and Hamrick, J. L. and Lewis, P. O.}, year={1995}, pages={584} } @article{williams_megraw_1994, title={JUVENILE MATURE RELATIONSHIPS FOR WOOD DENSITY IN PINUS-TAEDA}, volume={24}, ISSN={["0045-5067"]}, DOI={10.1139/x94-095}, abstractNote={ Open-pollinated seeds were collected from loblolly pine (Pinustaeda L.) selections made in natural stands in eastern North Carolina, then planted in a short-term, closely spaced test and in a conventional genetic test. Wood density measurements from seedlings, from older trees, and from parents aged 40–75 years old were used to estimate the genetic covariance structure between juvenile and mature wood. These data were also used to determine if the genetic relationship between juvenile and mature wood varied with the estimation method used or with the fertilizer and irrigation treatments in the short-term test. Age–age relationships were moderately to highly positive and these results were corroborative using several methods: parent–offspring regression and coefficient of genetic prediction, half-sib analyses, and graphical use of type I selection mistakes. Strong age–age relationships (rg = 0.76 to 0.90) were expressed between juvenile wood in the short-term test and older-tree wood density in the genetic test. Moderate to high heritabilities (h2 = 0.55–0.76) were estimated for juvenile wood in short-term tests. The latter estimates tended to be higher than heritability estimates based on parent–offspring regression (h2 = 0.23–0.25). There was negligible family × treatment interaction due to rank change between short-term testing treatments. Height and specific gravity expressed a slight positive correlation at all ages. }, number={4}, journal={CANADIAN JOURNAL OF FOREST RESEARCH-REVUE CANADIENNE DE RECHERCHE FORESTIERE}, author={WILLIAMS, CG and MEGRAW, RA}, year={1994}, month={Apr}, pages={714–722} }