Dear Ahasan Ullah Khan The application of mathematics to biological problems dates back to 1865 when Gregor Mendel deduced inhertance of biological characters mathematically in his pea plants. Nowadays, almost all biological research papers carry statistical analyses in the result's section. Yes, mathematical model can be applied to account for the problems related to bean genetics and disease resistance.
Dear Ahasan Ullah Khan The application of mathematics to biological problems dates back to 1865 when Gregor Mendel deduced inhertance of biological characters mathematically in his pea plants. Nowadays, almost all biological research papers carry statistical analyses in the result's section. Yes, mathematical model can be applied to account for the problems related to bean genetics and disease resistance.
I think that only the inclusion of mathematical aspects in your article on genetics and bean diseases will give the manuscript a real scientific character.
Yes, you could apply some mathematical model to your paper, but only if you have a significant question that justify its application. Your enuntiation seems vague, since there are a lot of different mathematical possible approaches to deal with a given problem. Naturally, statistical analysis is the minimum mathematical approach that you should apply, since if not your conclusions will lack of scientific rigor. However, beyond of statistic analysis you could apply network analysis, differential equations models, agent models, markov model, pattern recognition, etc, etc. Lastly, the election will be dictated by the nature of the probem and for your expertise. Mathematical modeling in biological research is not a fashionable requisite but a scientific need. Best regards, Daniel