Edwards, Brianne
Hornstein, Eli D.
Wilson, Nathan J.
Sederoff, Heike
Funding for this research was provided by:
U.S. Department of Energy (DE-SC0018269, DE-SC0018269, DE-SC0018269)
National Science Foundation (DGE-1828820, DGE-1828820)
Article History
Received: 3 February 2022
Accepted: 28 September 2022
First Online: 5 October 2022
Declarations
:
: The present study does not involve any species that is listed as vulnerable, rare, endangered, or indeterminate under the IUCN Policy Statement on Research Involving Species at Risk of Extinction (IUCN) or protected under the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES). The plant specimen used in this study, <i>Camelina sativa</i> cv. Suneson, is a cultivated crop, not a wild species, therefore no voucher specimens were obtained or deposited in an herbarium collection as plants that are cultivated in a herbarium or greenhouse or even commercially, should be fine without a voucher specimen. <i>Camelina sativa</i> cv. Suneson is a commonly used variety developed by Montana State University and released to the public domain without proprietary restrictions in 2007 (variety MT0305; ExternalRef removed), therefore permissions to obtain the germplasm were not necessary. Furthermore, all plant material used in this study was grown and collected within our own laboratory and greenhouse facility at NC State University and in compliance with institutional, national, and international guidelines and legislation. Seed stocks from the lines used in this study are retained in the laboratory at NC State University and may be made available upon request.
: Not applicable.
: The authors declare no competing interests in relation to the presented work.