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Jinliang Yang

Jinliang Yang, assistant professor of agronomy and horticulture, is leading an effort to better understand sorghum’s genetic makeup to improve the crop’s nitrogen use efficiency. Yang is working with sorghum including this field at UNL’s Havelock Fields. September 9, 2022. Photo by Craig Chandler / University Communication.
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Jinliang Yang, assistant professor of agronomy and horticulture, is leading an effort to better understand sorghum’s genetic makeup to improve the crop’s nitrogen use efficiency. Yang is working with sorghum including this field at UNL’s Havelock Fields. September 9, 2022. Photo by Craig Chandler / University Communication.
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Nebraska’s Jinliang Yang (pictured), assistant professor of agronomy and horticulture, and Gen Xu, post doc and first author of the study and their colleagues, have shown that differences in how genes are turned on and off, rather than actual changes in DNA, may explain some important physiological differences between modern-day maize and a 10,000-year-old ancestral species. November 18, 2020. Photo by Craig Chandler / University Communication.
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Nebraska’s Jinliang Yang, assistant professor of agronomy and horticulture, and Gen Xu (picutred), post doc and first author of the study and their colleagues, have shown that differences in how genes are turned on and off, rather than actual changes in DNA, may explain some important physiological differences between modern-day maize and a 10,000-year-old ancestral species. November 18, 2020. Photo by Craig Chandler / University Communication.
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Nebraska’s Jinliang Yang (left), assistant professor of agronomy and horticulture, and Gen Xu, post doc and first author of the study and their colleagues, have shown that differences in how genes are turned on and off, rather than actual changes in DNA, may explain some important physiological differences between modern-day maize and a 10,000-year-old ancestral species. November 18, 2020. Photo by Craig Chandler / University Communication.
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Studio portrait of Jinliang Yang, Assistant Professor, Agronomy and Horticulture. New Faculty Orientation. August 16, 2017. Photo by Greg Nathan, University Communication Photography.
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All photos are available to UNL departments at no charge. Email the titles of the photos to Craig Chandler or Monica Myers.

cchandler2@unl.edu
mmyers2@unl.edu

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