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Fig. 1 | Chemical and Biological Technologies in Agriculture

Fig. 1

From: Bioinformatics for agriculture in the Next-Generation sequencing era

Fig. 1

(a) Timeline from 2000 to 2014 indicating the release of the completely sequenced genomes for some of the major plants (green), animals (red), and fishes (black) of interest in agriculture. The dashed line indicates the start of Next-Generation Sequencing (NGS) era. The start of major massive sequencing projects are also indicated: the 1001 A. thaliana genomes project (http://1001genomes.org/), the SoyBase project (sequencing of 350 soybean lines) (http://www.soybase.org/), the 29 Mammals genomes project (https://www.broadinstitute.org/scientific-community/science/projects/mammals-models/29-mammals-project), the 1000 Plant genomes project (https://sites.google.com/a/ualberta.ca/onekp/), and the 150 Tomato genomes ReSequencing project (http://www.tomatogenome.net/). (b) Graphs indicate the growth as number of nucleotides (nt) of GenBank (all entries), GenBank genomes (only genome sequencing efforts), and SRA archive (all entries) and the number (#) of bacterial genomes (https://gold.jgi.doe.gov/) released in the same timeline

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