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HI TECH HORTICULTURE: VOLUME 04: PLANT PROTECTION AND STRESS MANAGEMENT

Sachin Tyagi
  • Country of Origin:

  • Imprint:

    NIPA

  • eISBN:

    9789389992748

  • Binding:

    EBook

  • Number Of Pages:

    192

  • Language:

    English

Individual Price: 2,700.00 INR 2,430.00 INR + Tax

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Horticulture plays an important part in today's agriculture and there are new avenues that are being achieved by horticulture. The subject has transformed from only being about vegetables, fruits, flowers and postharvest technology and has moved towards disease, breeding, pathology, physiology, greenhouse technologies and other areas which were never heard for. The book series: Hi-Tech Horticulture has been worked out keeping the above mentioned issues in mind with contribution by eminent professors and scientists. The volumes on: 1. Crop Improvement Nursery and Rootstock Management 2. Organic Farming and Sustainable Development Techniques 3. Improved Production Techniques 4. Plant Protection and Stress Management 5. Value Addition and Post-Harvest Management 6. Advance Techniques

0 Start Pages

Preface Horticulture plays an important part in today’s agriculture and there are new avenues that are being achieved by horticulture. The subject has transformed from only being about vegetables, fruits, flowers and postharvest technology and has moved towards disease, breeding, pathology, physiology, greenhouse technologies and other areas which were never heard for. The book series: Hi-Tech Horticulture has been worked out keeping the above mentioned issues in mind with contribution by eminent professors and scientists. The volumes are on: 1. Crop Improvement Nursery and Rootstock Management 2. Organic Farming and Sustainable Development Techniques 3. Improved Production Techniques 4. Plant Protection and Stress Management 5. Value Addition and Post-Harvest Management 6. Advance Techniques

 
1 Usage Mathematical Modelling in the Integrated Protection of Plants by Using the Microsoft Excel
Guram Aleksidze and Leri Nozadze

Abstract We studied the mathematic model of “predator-prey” and„ pest-parasite”. Under the circumstances when these two specious coexist in particular conditions. In that case the components of the system continuously change. We describe the system by two differential equations which conclude into numeral equation by integrators and variables. According these equations we calculate some numeral formulations essential to these changeable populations.    We produce the prevalence of predator-prey systems by using analytic and quantitatic methods for massive rage of data. This process as usual is described by the differential equation consisting assembling point. The constructed phase portrait which we need to solve the problem is found by Runge-Kuta method. So the article speaks about the conformity with a law which we receive by permanent change of parameters’ menaings and temporal changes of biological systems’ conditions. When there is no positive steady state both prey and predator can become extinct. In one particular case both species become extinct regardless on the initial data. In the second, both species will die out only if initial prey/predator ratio is too low. Otherwise, only the predator goes extinct, while prey tends to carrying capacity.

1 - 36 (36 Pages)
INR338.00 INR305.00 + Tax
 
2 Integrated Pest Management Issues in Vegetable Crops – Current Scenario and Future Strategies
H.R. Sardana, M.N. Bhat and Manoj Chaudhry

Introduction Pests and diseases are very serious issues in vegetable crops and account for nearly 25-30% damage to the expected yields across different crops inspite of high amount of chemical use. Excessive reliance on chemicals has created problems of pest resistance to pesticides, decimated useful fauna and flora as well as imperilled the delicate ecological balance. In addition, pesticide treadmill lures the farmers for ever increasing use of pesticide dosages, thereby encouraging a vicious cycle of environmental pollution. Vegetable crops are one of the major groups of crops that contribute heavily in this regard, being the third major consumers of pesticides after cotton and rice in our country. Insect pests and diseases inflict the horticultural crops especially vegetable crops more than others because of their supple nature, intensive cultivation under high moisture and input regimes, short duration and denser canopy of the crops.

37 - 56 (20 Pages)
INR338.00 INR305.00 + Tax
 
3 Major Insect Pests of Apple Grown Under Temperate Conditions of Kashmir and their Integrated Pest Management
Muneer Ahmad and Sajad Mohiudin

Introduction The fruit crop acreage in Kashmir is rapidly increasing and is developing into perennial stretches of monocropping systems. The area of apple in Kashmir 143790 ha. Parallely this has led to increased pests and use of chemical pesticides. As a result, pest resurgence, pesticide residue in fruits, deleterious effect on biological agents and resistance build-up in insects have all complicated pest management (Smith, 1970).In view of the rising export potential of residue free fruits and the crisis situation created by indiscriminate use of pesticides, fruit crops need much more attention in terms of IPM input than what is getting now. It is therefore, necessary to develop and follow a rational approach with greater reliance on IPM to promote sustainability and to reduce the number of application of hazardous chemicals. Integrated pest management requires thorough preplanning even before establishing the fruit orchard which includes selection of suitable site,siol type, improved and pest free scion varieties, resistant rootstock compatible with scion, regular pest and weather monitoring in the orchard, balanced use of fertilizers, water management, proper training and pruning, improved cultural practices,augementation and conservation of parasitoids and predators and need based application of selective insecticides.The various strategies for successful management of economically important pests of temperate fruits are thoroughly discussed.

57 - 76 (20 Pages)
INR338.00 INR305.00 + Tax
 
4 Sustainable Management of Aphid (Aphis Gossypii Glover) Infesting Brinjal (Eggplant), Solanum Melongena (Linn.)
Sunil Kr. Ghosh

Introduction India is gifted with varied agro-climatic conditions for growing an array of vegetable crops to combat the present ill-balanced diet. The brinjal belongs to the family Solanaceous and to the genus Solanum, species melongena. The egg plant, Guinea squash are some synonyms to brinjal. It is a hardy crop and does best in worm and moist climate. The crop is generally grown twice or thrice in a year. The edible part, fruit is of high nutritive value and can well be compared with tomatoes. Insect pest constitute the major limiting factors in the successful production of brinjal. Pest comples of brinjal is very high and aphid (Aphis gossypii) causes heavy damage to the crop. Aphis gossypii (Hemiptera: Aphididae) is a tiny insect or greenfly in the superfamily Aphidoidea in the order Hemiptera. It is a true bug and sucks sap from plants. It is a widely distributed pest of a variety of agricultural crops in the families Cucurbitaceae, Rutaceae and Malvaceae.

77 - 100 (24 Pages)
INR338.00 INR305.00 + Tax
 
5 Biotic and Abiotic Stress Management in Horticulture
Abha Kumari, Km. Lalita, Sachin Tyagi, Pushpa Kumari and Rajani Sinha

1. Introduction Stress-Any deviation from this optimal condition of any factor essential for its growth will lead to aberrant change in physiological processes and due to this plant body will experience tension and this state can be referred as plant under stress. In physics, stress is defined as mechanical force per unit area applied to an object. In response to the applied stress, an object undergoes a change in the dimension, which is also as strain. However, the biological stress is defined as an advance force or a condition, which inhibits the normal functioning and well-being of a biological system such as plants. There are several abiotic and biotic factors, which under a given condition, may be perceived as stress by plants.

101 - 126 (26 Pages)
INR338.00 INR305.00 + Tax
 
6 Biotechnological Strategies for Amelioration of Biotic and Abiotic Stresses in Fruit Crops
Shahnawaz Ahmed, Jagveer Singh, Indira Devi and Preeti Kumari

Introduction Stress in physics is any force applied to an object. Stress in biology is any change in environmental conditions that might reduce or adversely change a plant’s growth or development. ‘Stress’ or ‘pressure’ was introduced into the theory of elasticity as an amount of force for a given unit area. When sufficient force is applied to material, the material bends and the change in length is termed ‘strain’. With increasing stress, the initially linear relationship between stress and strain becomes nonlinear until the proportionality limit, after which the material deforms elastically (it can bend back), then plastically (it cannot bend back) until it ruptures. Since the 1930s, biologists have attempted to apply this terminology to biological systems, albeit the nature of the stresses will vary between nonliving materials and organisms.

127 - 150 (24 Pages)
INR338.00 INR305.00 + Tax
 
7 Drought Stress Management in Vegetable Crops
K. Balakrishnan and P. Balasubramanian

Introduction Stress is usually defined as an external factor that exerts a disadvantageous influence on the plant. In most cases, stress is measured in relation to plant survival, crop yield, biomass accumulation or the primary assimilation processes (CO2 and mineral uptake), which are related to overall growth. Stresses can be biotic, imposed by other organisms or abiotic arising from an excess or deficit in the physical or chemical environment. Biotic stress arises by attack of bacteria, viruses, fungi, invertebrates and even other plants, whereas abiotic stress occurs due to drought, water logging, high or low temperatures, excessive soil salinity, imbalance of mineral nutrients in the soil, heavy metals and too much or too little light. Stresses trigger wide range of plant responses, from altered gene expression and cellular metabolism to changes in growth rates and crop yields.

151 - 164 (14 Pages)
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8 Stress Management in Vegetable Crops through Grafting Technology – A Review
Partha Choudhuri, Sankhendu Bikash Chattopadhyay and Praveen Kumar Maurya

Abstract Vegetable cultivation has been threatened due to limited availability of arable land and frequent vagaries of environment and incidence of soil borne pests and diseases. Development of stress tolerant or climate smart cultivars through conventional breeding methods or dependence upon agrochemicals for mitigation of pest and disease problems for vegetable crops have been practised since time immemorial. Salinity in coastal belts, high or low temperature injury, bacterial wilt in solanaceous vegetables, Fusarium wilt and nematode infestation in cucurbits are common of the many maladies which have caused tremendous loss in productivity and quality of vegetable crops throughout the globe. 

165 - 178 (14 Pages)
INR338.00 INR305.00 + Tax
 
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