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A32=Dr Zhi Li
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Achieving Durable Disease Resistance in Cereals

English

This book is number 106 in the Burleigh Dodds Series in Agriculture Science and continues this excellent series of informative reviews in plant and animal agricultural production systems. This volume is a collection of chapters by experts in cereal diseases and disease management from around the world and contains some excellent detailed overviews on recent advances in our understanding of key cereal pathogens and advances in their management. It will be a valuable resource for wheat and barley focussed researchers, breeders and growers.
(Professor Matt Dickinson, University of Nottingham, UK - Plant Pathology)

Its been estimated that up to 40% of crop yields are lost to pests and diseases worldwide, a problem exacerbated by increasing fungicide resistance. Given the continuous struggle between crops and the diseases which exploit them, achieving durable disease resistance remains a key challenge in ensuring global food security. A range of issues need to be addressed to meet this challenge for major diseases affecting cereal crops such as Fusarium, barley yellow dwarf virus (BYDV) and Septoria.

Achieving durable disease resistance in cereals provides an authoritative review of key advances, from better understanding of pathogen biology/epidemiology and plant-pathogen interactions, to identifying sources of resistance and advances in techniques for breeding new varieties. This collection offers a comprehensive review of research on achieving durable resistance to diseases such as Fusarium head blight, Septoria tritici blotch, Septoria nodorum blotch, tan spot, blast, BYDV and Ramularia.

Edited by Professor Richard Oliver, Curtin University, Australia, Achieving durable disease resistance in cereals will be an excellent reference for researchers in cereal science, arable farmers, government and private sector agencies supporting cereal production and companies supplying the cereals sector (e.g. seed companies). It complements Integrated disease management of wheat and barley, also edited by Professor Oliver, published by Burleigh Dodds Science in 2018. See more
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A32=Dr Cheng JiangA32=Dr Clare M. LewisA32=Dr Diane G. O. SaundersA32=Dr Feiquan TanA32=Dr Laetitia WillocquetA32=Dr Serge SavaryA32=Dr Tianheng RenA32=Dr Vanessa Bueno-SanchoA32=Dr Zhi LiAge Group_Uncategorizedautomatic-updateB01=Prof Richard OliverB01=Professor Richard OliverCategory1=Non-FictionCategory=TVFCategory=TVKCCategory=TVPCOP=United KingdomDelivery_Delivery within 10-20 working daysLanguage_EnglishPA=AvailablePrice_€100 and abovePS=Activesoftlaunch
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Product Details
  • Weight: 1456g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 19 Oct 2021
  • Publisher: Burleigh Dodds Science Publishing Limited
  • Publication City/Country: United Kingdom
  • Language: English
  • ISBN13: 9781786766014

About

Professor Richard Oliver has recently retired from his position as John Curtin Distinguished Professor in the Centre for Crop Disease Management at Curtin University Australia. Amongst other honours Professor Oliver is an Honorary Fellow of the National Institute of Agricultural Botany (NIAB) Honorary Professor at Nottingham Universities and was previously a Fellow at Rothamsted Research in the UK and a Visiting Professor at Wageningen University The Netherlands. He is also a past President of the British Society for Plant Pathology. Prof Kim Hammond-Kosack is a molecular plant pathologist and geneticist whos current research focuses on fungal pathogens which infect hexaploid wheat. Since 1998 her group has investigated the Fusarium-wheat interaction first in industry (1998-2002) and then at Rothamsted Research (since 2002). She discovered the symptomless phase of floral infection which is crucial for disease formation. Her group has played a major role in completing the full assembly and annotation of the reference genomes for F. graminearum F. culmorum and F. venenatum genomes. She has published over 160 peer reviewed publications 7 patents and is presently an associate editor at Plant Physiology. Since 2017 she has been the deputy head of the Department of Biointeractions and Crop Protection at Rothamsted Research. Dr Stephen B. Goodwin is a Research Plant Pathologist with the Agricultural Research Service of the U.S. Department of Agriculture with a current focus on Septoria tritici blotch of wheat plus tar spot of maize. Dr. Marc-Henri Lebrun is a research director at the French CNRS (National Centre for Scientific Research) and currently head of the EGIP team at BIOGER INRAE-AgroParisTech Paris-Saclay University Institute dedicated to the study of fungal plant pathogens in Thiverval-Grignon France. He is also President of the foundation for European Conferences on Fungal Genetics. He has served in editorial board of Fungal Genetic and Biology for 10 years and he is currently Editor for Frontiers in Microbiology. He has supervised 12 PhD and he has been director of UMR BIOGER (100 scientists/technicians/students) for 10 years (2005-2014). Dr Francisco Lopez-Ruiz leads the Fungicide Resistance Group at the Centre for Crop and Disease Management (CCDM). Based in the School of Molecular and Life Sciences at Curtin University Australia the Fungicide Resistance Group has made major contributions towards the management of fungicide resistance in several key cereal pathogens. Dr Lopez-Ruiz has published widely on the mechanisms of fungicide resistance and its detection. Dr. Franckowiak has studied barley breeding and genetics for over 40 years with research programs at North Dakota State University Fargo ND USA; Department of Agriculture and Fisheries at the Hermitage Research Facility Warwick Queensland Australia; and the University of Minnesota. In corporation with Dr. Udda Lundqvist Dr. Franckowiak prepared many new and revised Barley Genetic Stock (BGS) descriptions for the Barley Genetics Newsletter (BGN). Professor Frank Ordon is President of the Julius Kühn-Institute (JKI) the Federal Research Centre for Cultivated Plants in Germany. He is Honorary Professor for Molecular Resistance Breeding at the Martin-Luther University of Halle-Wittenberg Editor-in-Chief of Plant Breeding a member of the editorial board of several other journals and Chair of the Wheat Initiative Research Committee. He has published widely on molecular markers and improving resistance to biotic and abiotic stress especially in cereals. Dr. Christina Cowger is a small grains pathologist with the Agricultural Research Service of the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) and a professor in the Department of Entomology and Plant Pathology at North Carolina State University in Raleigh North Carolina. Her research focuses on the epidemiology and sustainable management of diseases of wheat and barley especially powdery mildew Fusarium head blight Septoria nodorum blotch (SNB) and barley yellow dwarf virus. Dr. Cowger has contributed to the identification of numerous sources of resistance to cereal diseases as well as illuminating the etiology of those diseases and the population dynamics of the pathogens. She coordinates the USDA SNB screening nursery and is active in the US Wheat & Barley Scab Initiative.

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