Genetic Resources, Chromosome Engineering, and Crop Improvement: Vegetable Crops, Volume 3

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$189.95
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ISBN 9780849396465
Cat# 9646
 

Features

  • Stresses the importance of germplasm collections, maintenance and exploration, and assimilation for increasing the yield for major vegetable crops
  • Presents methodologies for crop improvement including conventional, cytogenetic, mutation, molecular, cell, and tissue cultures, and genetic transformation§Addresses the current status of taxonomy, genomic and chromosomal constitution, and geographical distribution of essential vegetable crops
  • Discusses the nutrition values of vegetables that are rich sources of minerals, vitamins and antioxidants
  • Provides information on the consumption of vegetables that may reduce obesity and prevent cancer and diabetes
  • Identifies comprehensive and current information about abiotic and biotic stresses of plants, sources of resistance against diseases and pests, genetics of resistance, and methodology of resistance breeding
  • Offers extensive literature citations in each chapter
  • Includes a full color insert
  • Summary

    Summarizing landmark research, Volume 3 of this essential series furnishes information on the availability of germplasm resources that breeders can exploit for producing high-yielding vegetable crop varieties. Written by leading international experts, this volume offers the most comprehensive and up-to-date information on employing genetic resources to increase the yield of those vegetable crops that provide a main source of minerals, vitamins, and antioxidants.

    In eleven succinct chapters, Genetic Resources, Chromosome Engineering, and Crop Improvement: Vegetable Crops, Volume 3 focuses on potato, tomato, brassicas, okra, capsicum, alliums, cucurbits, lettuce, eggplant, and carrot.

    An introductory chapter outlines the cytogenetic architecture of vegetable crops, describes the principles and strategies of cytogenetics and breeding, and summarizes landmarks in current research. This sets the stage for the ensuing crop-specific chapters. Each chapter generally provides a comprehensive account of the crop, its origin and taxonomy, wild relatives, exploitation of genetic resources diversity in the primary, secondary, and tertiary gene pools through breeding and cytogenetic manipulation, and genetic enrichment using the tools of molecular genetics and biotechnology.

    Certain to become the standard reference for improving the yields of these critical vegetable crops, this book is the definitive source of information for plant breeders, gene-bankers, cytogeneticists, taxonomists, molecular biologists, biotechnologists, and graduate students, researchers, agronomists, horticulturists, farmers and consumers in these fields.

    Table of Contents

    Landmark Research in Vegetable Crops; Ram J. Singh and Aleš Lebeda

    Potato; Richard E. Veilleux and Hielke ("Henry") De Jong

    Tomato; Yuanfu Ji and J. W. Scott

    Brassica-Vegetable Crops; N. Inomata

    Okra (Abelmoschus spp.); I. S. Bisht and K. V. Bhat

    Capsicum; Caroline Djian-Caporalino, Véronique Lefebvre, Anne-Marie Sage-Daubèze, and Alain Palloix

    Allium; Masayoshi Shigyo

    Cucurbits (Cucurbitaceae; Cucumis spp., Cucurbita spp., Citrullus spp.); A. Lebeda, M. P. Widrlechner, J. Staub, H. Ezura, J. Zalapa,
    and E. Krístková

    Lettuce (Asteraceae; Lactuca spp.); A. Lebeda, E. J. Ryder, R. Grube, I. Doležalová, and E. Krístková

    Eggplant (Solanum melongena L.); Major Singh and Rajesh Kumar

    Carrot; Philipp W. Simon and Irwin L. Goldman

    Editorial Reviews

    "I highly recommend this book as well as others from this series for those who are actively working on breeding of these important plant species, and for those scientists who are interested in the enormous biological diversity of vegetable crops. The book is clearly written, contains very important information and each Chapter has an excellent bibliography for further reading."

    – Ervin Balázs, Department of Applied Genomics, Agricultural Research Institute, in South African Journal of Botany, 2007, Vol. 73, No. 3