Plant Responses to the Gaseous Environment

Lieferzeit: Lieferbar innerhalb 14 Tagen

106,99 

Molecular, metabolic and physiological aspects

ISBN: 9401045658
ISBN 13: 9789401045650
Autor: Wellburn, A R/Alscher, R G
Verlag: Springer Verlag GmbH
Umfang: 416 S., 24 s/w Illustr., 416 p. 24 illus.
Erscheinungsdatum: 06.12.2011
Auflage: 1/1994
Produktform: Kartoniert
Einband: KT
Artikelnummer: 4536123 Kategorie:

Beschreibung

The study of air pollution effects on vegetation has made rapid progress in the last five years. Growing concerns about effects of future increases in temperature and carbon dioxide (C0 ) levels on plant life have altered 2 the perspective of plant biologists in the field of pollutant-plant inter actions. In many cases, it is anticipated that crops and trees will increasingly experience multiple stresses in an altered environment: an environment in which physiological processes will no longer be matched to climate. Because of this problem, a major part of the focus of the air pollution effects research has shifted since 1987. Moreover, recent advances in our understanding of plant metabolic and molecular responses to stress have made it clear that many abiotic stresses elicit similar fundamental mechanisms. Adaptation responses to drought, extremes of temperature, xenobiotics and air pollutants are now known to involve the response of both specific and common resistance mechanisms, which often include altered gene expression. The field of air pollution effects on vegetation has benefitted greatly from this unification since results obtained and advances made in allied fields are now directly relevant. The advent of molecular genetics has made possible the production of transgenic plants containing altered amounts of resistance gene products which enables the posing of experimental questions which could not be addressed only five years ago. Hypotheses concerning the relevance of specific metabolites and processes to known responses to air pollution stress can now be tested.

Autorenporträt

InhaltsangabePreface. The potential effect of global climate change on terrestrial vegetation. The potential effects of concurrent increases in temperature, CO2 and O3 on net photosynthesis, as mediated by RubisCo. Interactive effects of temperature and atmospheric CO2 on physiology and growth. CO2 effects on photosynthetic end product synthesis and feedback. Effects of altered carbon dioxide concentrations on gene expression. Free radical scavenging. Alterations of plant metabolism by ozone exposure. Index.

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