Data Usage Policy for Arachis cardenasii accession K10017, assembly version 1.0 As a public service, the researchers who have assembled the genome for Arachis cardenasii K10017 are making this assembly available before scientific publication according to the Ft. Lauderdale Accord (https://www.genome.gov/pages/research/wellcomereport0303.pdf). These data sets available from the Legume Federation / PeanutBase Data Store prior to peer-reviewed publication of the data, with the expectation and desire to publish analysis of the data in a reasonable time without preemption by other groups. By accessing these data, you agree not to publish any articles containing analyses of genes or genomic data on a whole genome or chromosome scale prior to publication by the sequencing consortium of a comprehensive genome analysis ("Reserved Analyses"). Reserved analyses include the identification of complete (whole genome) sets of genomic features such as genes, gene families, regulatory elements, repeat structures, GC content, or any other genome feature, and whole-genome- or chromosome- scale comparisons with other species, including other soybean species and cultivars. For specific questions about data use, please send your inquiry to peanutbase-contact@iastate.edu. If you will be employing the data for non-reserved analyses, such as cloning a gene of interest, designing mapping panels or to analyze a gene family, etc., please reference "The genome sequence of Arachis cardenasii, pre-publication; sequence authors Josh Clevenger, Steven B. Cannon, Cal Youngblood, Justin N. Vaughn, Brian Abernathy, David J. Bertioli, Brian Scheffler" in your provisional citation. These data may be freely downloaded and used by all who respect the restrictions in the previous paragraphs. The assembly and annotations should not be redistributed or repackaged without permission. Once the sequence is moved to unreserved status, the data will be freely available for any subsequent use. If you wish to use this data, please contact peanutbase-contact@iastate.edu with your plans, to ensure that proposed usage of sequence data are not Reserved Analyses.