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Plant abiotic stress / edited by Matthew A. Jenks and Paul M. Hasegawa.

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublisher: Ames, Iowa : Wiley-Blackwell, 2013Edition: 2nd editionDescription: xvi, 317 pages : illustrations ; 26 cmContent type:
  • text
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 9781118412176 (cloth : alk. paper)
Subject(s): LOC classification:
  • SB 112.5 .P694 2014
Contents:
Flooding tolerance / Pamela Ronald -- Drought tolerance adaptive mechanisms / Paul E. Verslues -- Stomatal regulation of plant water status / Yoshiyuki Murata -- Root-associated stress response networks / Philip N. Benfey -- Low temperature tolerance / Matsuo Uemura -- Salinity tolerance / Stuart Roy -- Heavy metal tolerance / Leon V. Kochian -- Epigenetic regulation of abiotic stress response / Viswanathan Chinnusamy -- Genomics of plant abiotic stress tolerance / Hans J. Bohnert -- QTL and association mapping for plant abiotic stress tolerance trait identification and genetic introgression for crop improvement / Peter Langridge.
Summary: Abiotic stressors are non-living environmental stressors that can have a negative impact on a plants ability to grow and thrive in a given environment. Stressors can range from temperature stress (both extreme heat and extreme cold) water stress, aridity, salinity among others. This book explores the full gamut of plant abiotic stressors and plants molecular responses and adaptations to adverse environmental conditions. The new edition of Plant Abiotic Stress provides up-to-date coverage of the latest research advances in plant abiotic stress adaptation, with special emphasis on the associated and integrative aspects of physiology, signaling, and molecular-genetics. Since the last edition, major advances in whole genome analysis have revealed previously unknown linkages between genes, genomes, and phenotypes, and new biological and ?omics approaches have elucidated previously unknown cellular mechanisms underlying stress tolerance. Chapters are organized by topic, but highlight processes that are integrative among diverse stress responses. As with the first edition, Plant Abiotic Stress will have broad appeal to scientists in fields of applied agriculture, ecology, plant sciences, and biology.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Call number Status Date due Barcode
Graduate Studies Graduate Studies DLSU-D GRADUATE STUDIES Graduate Studies Graduate Studies SB 112.5 .P694 2014 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 3CIR201766299

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Flooding tolerance / Pamela Ronald -- Drought tolerance adaptive mechanisms / Paul E. Verslues -- Stomatal regulation of plant water status / Yoshiyuki Murata -- Root-associated stress response networks / Philip N. Benfey -- Low temperature tolerance / Matsuo Uemura -- Salinity tolerance / Stuart Roy -- Heavy metal tolerance / Leon V. Kochian -- Epigenetic regulation of abiotic stress response / Viswanathan Chinnusamy -- Genomics of plant abiotic stress tolerance / Hans J. Bohnert -- QTL and association mapping for plant abiotic stress tolerance trait identification and genetic introgression for crop improvement / Peter Langridge.

Abiotic stressors are non-living environmental stressors that can have a negative impact on a plants ability to grow and thrive in a given environment. Stressors can range from temperature stress (both extreme heat and extreme cold) water stress, aridity, salinity among others. This book explores the full gamut of plant abiotic stressors and plants molecular responses and adaptations to adverse environmental conditions.

The new edition of Plant Abiotic Stress provides up-to-date coverage of the latest research advances in plant abiotic stress adaptation, with special emphasis on the associated and integrative aspects of physiology, signaling, and molecular-genetics. Since the last edition, major advances in whole genome analysis have revealed previously unknown linkages between genes, genomes, and phenotypes, and new biological and ?omics approaches have elucidated previously unknown cellular mechanisms underlying stress tolerance.

Chapters are organized by topic, but highlight processes that are integrative among diverse stress responses. As with the first edition, Plant Abiotic Stress will have broad appeal to scientists in fields of applied agriculture, ecology, plant sciences, and biology.

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