ABSTRACT

Abiotic stresses such as drought, flooding, high or low temperatures, metal toxicity and salinity can hamper plant growth and development. Improving Abiotic Stress Tolerance in Plants explains the physiological and molecular mechanisms plants naturally exhibit to withstand abiotic stresses and outlines the potential approaches to enhance plant abiotic stress tolerance to extreme conditions. Synthesising developments in plant stress biology, the book offers strategies that can be used in breeding, genomic, molecular, physiological and biotechnological approaches that hold the potential to develop resilient plants and improve crop productivity worldwide.

 

Features

·       Comprehensively explains molecular and physiological mechanism of multiple abiotic stress tolerance in plants

·       Discusses recent advancements in crop abiotic stress tolerance mechanism and highlights strategies to develop abiotic stress tolerant genotypes for sustainability

·       Stimulates synthesis of information for plant stress biology for biotechnological applications

·       Presents essential information for large scale breeding and agricultural biotechnological programs for crop improvement

 

Written by a team of expert scientists, this book benefits researchers in the field of plant stress biology and is essential reading for graduate students and researchers generating stress tolerant crops through genetic engineering and plant breeding. It appeals to individuals developing sustainable agriculture through physiological and biotechnological applications.

chapter 2|18 pages

Root Plasticity under Low Phosphate Availability

A Physiological and Molecular Approach to Plant Adaptation under Limited Phosphate Availability

chapter 12|18 pages

Aquaporins

A Promising Gene Family for Tackling Stresses for Crop Improvement

chapter 17|8 pages

High-Throughput Genomics

Application in Plant Breeding under Abiotic Stress Conditions