Benjamin Karikari (PhD) is a Lecturer and Postgraduate Coordinator of the Department of Agricultural Biotechnology. He joined the University since December 2020. He holds PhD in Crop Genetics and Breeding from Nanjing Agricultural University, China, with expertise in bioinformatics, genomics (linkage and association mappings, marker-assisted breeding, gene/genome editing by Clustered regular interspaced short palindromic repeat (CRISPR)/CRISPR-associated protein9 (Cas9) (CRISPR/Cas9), Overexpression and Virus Induced Gene Silencing (VIGS)), proteomics, transcriptomics, metabolomics and microbiomics, along with conventional breeding strategies. He handles courses such as bioinformatics, and Molecular Biology and Genetic Engineering. He handles some contents in Crop Physiology, Breeding for Horticultural Crops and Concepts of Biotechnology with other senior members. He has skills in use of several statistical software, among them include R, GenStats, GraphPadPrism, Origin, TASSEL, Minitab, Stata, SPSS, Statistica, Statgraphics, Design Expert, Statistics and KyPlot. He was a recipient of 2021 Young African Phosphorus Fellowship Award from African Plant Nutrition Institute. His on-going research covers common bean (phosphorus use efficiency (PUE) and other agronomic trials), and soybean (PUE, climate related traits and agronomic traits). He introduced 308 Mungbean accessions from World Vegetable Center in Taiwan as a way of diversifying plant-based protein and legume crops in Ghana. Dr. Karikari is a Guest Editor and Reviewer for many journals of international repute including Frontiers in Plant Science, BMC Plant Biology, Scientific Reports, Theoretical and Applied Genetics, The Plant Genome, Genes, Plants, International Journal of Molecular Sciences, among others. Dr. Karikari has authored 45 peer-reviewed articles, 2 book chapters, 2 blog posts and 1 manual. Dr. Karikari commenced his Postdoctoral Fellowship in University Laval, Quebec Canada in June 2023 with focus on genome editing (CRISPR/Cas9) in soybean and development of pipeline for use of k-mers in genome-wide association mapping. He presented a poster at Plant and Animal Genome 31 Conference in San Diego, California, United States. He has several collaborators in China, Czech Republic, Egypt, Ghana, Benin, Mali, Nigeria, among others.
Research Interests
For more details on publications, see
ResearchGate (https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Benjamin-Karikari) and
Google Scholar (https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=YE8D-FsAAAAJ&hl=en).
Email Address: bkarikari@uds.edu.gh
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