eBook

$135.99  $181.15 Save 25% Current price is $135.99, Original price is $181.15. You Save 25%.

Available on Compatible NOOK devices, the free NOOK App and in My Digital Library.
WANT A NOOK?  Explore Now

Related collections and offers


Overview

Completely updated from the successful first edition, this book provides a timely update on the recent progress in our knowledge of all aspects of plant perception, signalling and adaptation to a variety of environmental stresses. It covers in detail areas such as drought, salinity, waterlogging, oxidative stress, pathogens, and extremes of temperature and pH. This second edition: Presents detailed and up-to-date research on plant responses to a wide range of stresses Includes new full-colour figures to help illustrate the principles outlined in the text Is written in a clear and accessible format, with descriptive abstracts for each chapter Written by an international team of experts, this book provides researchers with a better understanding of the major physiological and molecular mechanisms facilitating plant tolerance to adverse environmental factors. This new edition of Plant Stress Physiology is an essential resource for researchers and students of ecology, plant biology, agriculture, agronomy and plant breeding.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781780647319
Publisher: CAB International North America
Publication date: 01/20/2017
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 17 MB
Note: This product may take a few minutes to download.

About the Author

S Shabala is a Professor in Plant Physiology at the University of Tasmania, Australia. His major expertise is in stress physiology and membrane transport in plant, bacteria and animal systems. His 26 years of expertise in the field has resulted in ca 120 publications in international peer reviewed journals and over 2,300 citations and h-index of 28. He is routinely reviewing papers for over 50 international journals and acts as a reviewer for major funding bodies in Australia, USA, UK, and a large number of European countries. He is also an Editor/Editorial Board member on four international plant science journals. The Stress Physiology laboratory at the University of Tasmania he currently leads includes 15 members and collaborates with over 40 laboratories in 17 countries. Over the last 10 years he has hosted over 30 international visitors using the unique facilities for non-invasive microelectrode ion flux measurements; the so called MIFE technique he had pioneered in stress physiology research.

Table of Contents

1: Drought Tolerance in Crops: Physiology to Genomics
2: Salinity Stress: Physiological Constraints and Adaptive Mechanisms
3: Reactive Oxygen Species and Their Role in Plant Oxidative Stress
4: Plant Responses to Chilling Temperatures
5: High Temperature Stress in Plants: Consequences and Strategies for Protecting Photosynthetic Machinery
6: Flooding Tolerance in Plants
7: Adaptations to Aluminium Toxicity
8: Plant Stress under Non-optimal Soil pH
9: Desiccation Tolerance
10: UV-B Radiation: from Stressor to Regulatory Signal
11: Frost Tolerance and Avoidance in Plants
12: Heavy Metal Toxicity in Plants
13: Biotic Stress Signalling: Calcium Mediated Pathogen Defence Programs
From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews