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Identification and genomic location of resistance to bacterial leaf streak of barley. [PDF]
Velasco DD +5 more
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Microbiome and plant relationship: a symbiosis against phytopathogens. [PDF]
Zholdasbek A +11 more
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HOST-PLANT RESISTANCE IN PEST MANAGEMENT
Tropical Agrobiodiversity, 2021Host Plant Resistance (HPR) is an effective, economical and eco-friendly method introduced for pest management. The concept of HPR has been emphasized mainly in order to reduce the use of pesticides as it provides opportunities to improve research and extension documentation to assist producers. It can also be taken as an effective tool for sustainable
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Host Plant Resistance Breeding
2019Biotic stresses are the damage to plants caused by other living organisms such as bacteria, fungi, nematodes, insects, viruses and viroids. Some of the biotic stresses that devastated the world in the past are the potato blight in Ireland, coffee rust in Brazil, maize leaf blight in the USA.
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Chapter 3.3 Host plant resistance
1996Publisher Summary In spite of the growing economic importance of damage done by some eriophyoid mites, only little is known about resistance to these phytophagous mites. This chapter focuses on the few examples where plants resist the attack by eriophyoid mites and places these host–mite incompatible interactions in entomological and ...
E. Westphal, R. Bronner, F. Dreger
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Mechanisms of aphid adaptation to host plant resistance
Current Opinion in Insect Science, 2018Host-plant resistant (HPR) crops can play a major role in preventing insect damage, but their durability is limited due to insect adaptation. Research in basal plant resistance provides a framework to investigate adaptation against HPR. Resistance and adaptation are predicted to follow the gene-for-gene and zigzag models of plant defense.
Ashley D, Yates, Andy, Michel
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Host Plant Resistance: Cultivar- or Parasite-Specific Resistance
2001Within a population of susceptible and genetically uniform plants growing in the field and exbibiting basic compatibility with a given pathogen, there may occasionally be found plants that are able to defend themselves against the attacking homologous pathogen.
Hermann H. Prell, Peter Day
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Chemical basis of host-plant resistance to aphids
Plant, Cell and Environment, 1987Abstract The importance of host‐plant resistance of crop plants in the biological control of aphids and the formation of aphid biotypes is discussed. The rapid response of plant breeders to the formation of new aphid biotypes requires detailed knowledge on the mechanism of host‐plant resistance.
D. L. DREYER, B. C. CAMPBELL
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