Danielle J. Donnelly

Associate Professor
Plant Science
McGill University
Canada

Biography

Professor Danielle Donnelly is a long-standing member of the Plant Science Dept. at McGill, where she teaches and conducts research with undergraduate and graduate students. She teaches Plant Propagation and various Undergraduate Research courses; videos prepared by her students can be viewed here. Prof. Donnelly’s research relates to plant tissue culture technologies for clonal plant improvement, and lab and field-based screening for improved genotypes of table stock and processing cultivars of potato. She works closely with experts in potato technology both in industry and in government. Recent contributions have highlighted new technologies for potato improvement, based on somatic variation. Current efforts to screen potato genotypes for improved phytonutrients involve collaborators in the School of Dietetics and Human Nutrition and Canadian potato breeding agencies. Prof. Donnelly also directs McGill’s summer field study program in Barbados (Barbados Interdisciplinary Tropical Studies or BITS, for short).

Research Intrest

Somaclonal selection for improved processing and phytonutrient composition of cultivated potato (Solanum tubersosum L.). Screening table stock cultivars for improved nutrients for Canadian breeding programs.

List of Publications
High-Throughput Screening of Sensory and Nutritional Characteristics for Cultivar Selection in Commercial Hydroponic Greenhouse Crop Production Article · December 2015 with 108 Reads DOI: 10.1155/2015/376417
Biotransformation of polyphenols in a dynamic multistage gastrointestinal model Article · February 2016 with 157 Reads DOI: 10.1016/j.foodchem.2016.02.140
In vitro technology at the US Potato Genebank Article · March 2016 with 282 Reads DOI: 10.1007/s11627-016-9753-x

Global Scientific Words in Agri and Aquaculture