Well, the legend of Fig. 4 also has an errorHi GitT
Thanks for taking the time to take a look at that.
Yeah I see that the body of the paper shows that there are 9 pairs of autosomes that are very similar, the X looks like the autosomes but if measured carefully can be distinguished from them as it is slightly larger, and that the Y basically sticks out like a sore thumb with its heterochromatic arm and yet larger size than the X. It is just that in the abstract and in the body of the paper at least once, they flatly state that the X is the largest.
I remember the reference to the 1943 paper (had something to do with visible light microscopy techniques, no?), do you really think that explains it? I haven't had time to read it again, but I don't think that is the case. I'll keep your comment in mind when I re-read it. Thanks.
By the way, I would be interested to know more about your work with synthetic seeds.
'yellow' would be correct, and I found (wasn't reading all and wasn't specifically looking for it) also a flaw regarding the use of abbreviations. My general impression of that paper is rather moderate...5S rDNA: green signals
PLOS One isn't a bad journal, maybe it's because the authors are from Russia. No, I'm no racist! I simply suspect they hired someone to translate and didn't recheck .