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Flooding and Plant Growth

This Special Issue is based on the 7th Conference of the International Society for Plant Anaerobiosis (ISPA), held in Nijmegen, The Netherlands, 12–16 June 2001. The papers describe and analyse many of the responses that plants display when subjected to waterlogging of the soil or deeper submergence...

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Published in:Annals of botany 2003-01, Vol.91 (2), p.107-109
Main Authors: VISSER, E. J. W., VOESENEK, L. A. C. J., VARTAPETIAN, B. B., JACKSON, M. B.
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container_start_page 107
container_title Annals of botany
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creator VISSER, E. J. W.
VOESENEK, L. A. C. J.
VARTAPETIAN, B. B.
JACKSON, M. B.
description This Special Issue is based on the 7th Conference of the International Society for Plant Anaerobiosis (ISPA), held in Nijmegen, The Netherlands, 12–16 June 2001. The papers describe and analyse many of the responses that plants display when subjected to waterlogging of the soil or deeper submergence. These responses may be injurious or adaptive, and are discussed at various levels of organizational complexity ranging from ecosystem processes, through individual plants to single cells. The research incorporates molecular biology and genetics, cell physiology, biochemistry, hormone physiology, whole plant physiology, plant demography and ecology. The study of the damage to young rice plants caused by submergence, especially as experienced in the rainfed lowlands of Asia, is comprehensively addressed. This work integrates various specialized approaches ranging from agronomy to molecular genetics, and demonstrates how plant biology can be harnessed to improve stress tolerance in an important crop species while simultaneously improving basic understanding of tolerance mechanisms and plant processes.
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identifier ISSN: 0305-7364
ispartof Annals of botany, 2003-01, Vol.91 (2), p.107-109
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source JSTOR Archival Journals and Primary Sources Collection; Oxford Journals Online; PubMed Central
subjects acclimation
adaptation
anaerobiosis
flooding
Key words: Abiotic stress
Preface
rice
submergence
waterlogging
title Flooding and Plant Growth
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