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Abiotic Stress Tolerance in Crop Plants : Breeding and Biotechnology

Bidhan Roy and Asit Kumar Basu, New India Pub, 2009, xiv, 544 p, 25 b/w figs, 29 col. plates, tables, ISBN : 9788189422943, $130.00 (Includes free airmail shipping)

Contents: Preface. 1. Introduction. I. Physical stress: 2. Salt tolerance. II. Water stresses: 3. Water logging tolerance. 4. Drought tolerance. III. Temperatures stresses: 5. Heat tolerance. 6. Cold tolerance. IV. Oxidative stress: 7. Oxidative stress tolerance. V. Metal toxicity tolerance: Introduction. 8. Aluminium toxicity tolerance. 9. Iron toxicity tolerance. 10. Other metal toxicity tolerance. VI. Non-metal toxicity tolerance: 11. Non-metal toxicity tolerance. VII. Atmospheric stresses: 12. Air pollution. 13. Radiation stress tolerance. 14. Climate change. Colour versions of original plates in text. Index.

"Abiotic stresses have become an integral part of crop production. One or other persist either in soil, water or in atmosphere. The information in the areas of injury and tolerant mechanisms, variability for tolerance, breeding and biotechnology for improvement of crop plants against abiotic stresses are lying unorganized in different articles of journals and edited books. The information provided in this book is organized in an up to date citation, which will provide comprehensive literatures of recent advances. More emphasis has been given to elaborate the injury and tolerance mechanisms, and development of improved genotypes against stress environments. This book also deals with the plants' symptoms of particular abiotic stress, reclamation of soil and crop/cropping pattern to overcome the effect of adverse condition(s). Each chapter has been laid out with systematic approaches to develop abiotic stress tolerant genotypes using biotechnological tools. Use of molecular markers in stress tolerance and development of transgenic also have been detailed. Air pollution and climate change are the hot topic of the day and thus, the effect of air pollution and climate change on crop plants have been detailed in the final three chapters of this book. Under abiotic stress, plant produces a large quantity of free radicals (oxidants), which have been elaborated in a separate chapter 'Oxidative Stress'.

This book has been divided into seven major parts-physical stress (salt), water stresses (drought and water logging), temperature stresses (heat and cold), metal toxicities (aluminum, iron, cadmium, lead, nickel, chromium, cupper, zinc etc) and non-metal toxicities (boron and arsenic), oxidative stress, and finally atmospheric stresses (air pollution, radiation and climate change). Hope, this book will be of greater use for the students and researchers, particularly plant breeders and biotechnologists as well as the botanists, to understand the injury and tolerance mechanisms, and subsequently improvement of crop genotypes for abiotic stresses."

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