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A32=Dr Amanda Rasmussen
A32=Dr Christopher K. Black
A32=Dr Dimitris Bouranis
A32=Dr Findimila Dio Ishaya
A32=Dr Johannes A. Postma
A32=Dr Styliani N. Chorianopoulou
A32=Dr Wei Xuan
A32=Dr Yuanming Xie
A32=Prof Tom Beeckman
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B01=Prof. Peter J. Gregory
Category1=Non-Fiction
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Category=TVK
COP=United Kingdom
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Understanding and Improving Crop Root Function

English

a well-curated collection of chapters that provides a broad state-of-the-art survey of how roots contribute to plant crop performance and edaphic stress toleranceGiven the urgency to deploy sustainable and resilient agricultural technologies, this excellent collection demonstrates how novel approaches and collaborative trans-disciplinarity can prepare the field of root biology for transformative, real-world impacts. (Annals of Botany)

Recent decades have seen a dramatic increase in research on plant roots. A deeper understanding of the complex ways roots interact with soils is making it possible to design roots to optimise nutrient/water uptake in low-input environments, as well as deliver other benefits such as improved soil health and reduced nutrient leaching. Continued research is needed in this important area so that it can contribute to more sustainable, climate-smart crop production.

Understanding and improving crop root function features authoritative reviews of current research in all aspects of root science, including root growth regulators, root anatomy, nutrient acquisition and root system architecture. This collection discusses the responses of plant roots to abiotic and biotic stresses and how understanding nutrient uptake can be exploited to optimise root function. The book concludes with a dedicated section on methods used to improve crop root function and crop nutrient use efficiency, such as the use of plant growth-promoting rhizobacteria (PGPR).

With its eminent editor and international array of expert authors, Understanding and improving crop root function will be a standard reference for university researchers in crop physiology and nutrition, government and other agencies supporting agriculture, companies supplying crop nutrition products and services, as well as farmers.

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Current price €184.29
Original price €193.99
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A32=Dr Amanda RasmussenA32=Dr Christopher K. BlackA32=Dr Dimitris BouranisA32=Dr Findimila Dio IshayaA32=Dr Johannes A. PostmaA32=Dr Styliani N. ChorianopoulouA32=Dr Wei XuanA32=Dr Yuanming XieA32=Prof Tom BeeckmanAge Group_Uncategorizedautomatic-updateB01=Prof. Peter J. GregoryCategory1=Non-FictionCategory=TVFCategory=TVKCOP=United KingdomDelivery_Delivery within 10-20 working daysLanguage_EnglishPA=AvailablePrice_€100 and abovePS=Activesoftlaunch
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Product Details
  • Weight: 1082g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 19 Jan 2021
  • Publisher: Burleigh Dodds Science Publishing Limited
  • Publication City/Country: United Kingdom
  • Language: English
  • ISBN13: 9781786763600

About

Dr Peter J. Gregory is Emeritus Professor of Global Food Security at the University of Reading UK where he was previously Professor of Soil Science. Amongst many distinctions Professor Gregory is a former President of the International Society of Root Research (ISRR) as well as former Chief Executive of the Scottish Crop Research Institute (now part of the James Hutton Institute) and East Malling Research (now NIAB-EMR). He is internationally-renowned for his research in soil and crop root science. Tom Beeckman received his masters degree in Botany from the University of Ghent Belgium in 1985 and completed his Belgian interuniversity postgraduate education in Marine Biology in 1989. After performing postdoctoral research at the Laboratory of Genetics (Ghent University) he became Group Leader of the Root Development Group at the Flanders Institute of Biotechnology (VIB) in 2001. He then became a Professor at Ghent University in 2007 teaching plant developmental biology. His current work aims to understand how the branching pattern of roots becomes established by disentangling the molecular basis of lateral root spacing mechanisms that guarantee an optimal uptake. Amanda Rasmussen is Assistant Professor in the School of Biosciences at the University of Nottingham. She obtained her PhD at the University of Queensland Australia (2011) before embarking on a Marie Curie International Incoming Fellowship at the University of Ghent (Belgium) followed by a Newton International Fellowship and the Nottingham Research Fellowship both at the University of Nottingham (UK). Professor Malcolm Hawkesford is head of the Plant Sciences Department at Rothamsted Research and leads the Institutes contribution to the UK Designing Future Wheat strategic research programme. He is a Honorary Professor in Plant Sciences in the School of Biosciences University of Nottingham. He is an investigator on multiple international programmes with Brazil and India is a lead investigator in the Defra-funded Wheat Genetic Improvement Network participates in multiple BBSRC-funded projects aimed at optimizing resource use in wheat and is the lead scientist for major wheat GMO field experiments at Rothamsted. He is chair of the Nutrient Use Efficiency Expert Working Group of the International Wheat Initiative. Dr Roberto Tuberosa is Professor of Plant Biotechnology and Breeding in the Department of Agriculture and Food Science at the University of Bologna Italy. Professor Tuberosa is internationally renowned for his genomic studies to dissect the genetic basis of drought resistance in cereals and how to leverage this knowledge toward the release of climate-resilient cultivars. He is on the editorial board of several leading journals has been involved in many European and international research projects in cereal breeding represents Europe in the International Crop Science Society (ICSS) and has published over 170 articles as well as edited a number of books. He has organised international congresses on genomics and breeding of cereals under drought conditions and is a member of the scientific board of the Wheat Initiative and of the PlantStress advisory board. Amongst other honours Professor Tuberosa has been elected a Fellow of the Crop Society of America.

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