Agronomy and crop production Books

551 products


  • Plant Breeding Reviews 11

    John Wiley & Sons Inc Plant Breeding Reviews 11

    Book SynopsisThis work presents reviews on plant genetics and the breeding of crops by both traditional means and molecular methods. With emphasis on methodology, understanding crop genetics, and applications to major crops, it covers row crops, fruits, vegetables, nuts and trees grown for timber and pulp.Table of ContentsDedication: Normal Willison Simmonds: Plant Breeder, Teacher,Administrator (W. Spoor & F. England). The Origin of Maize: Evidence for Tripsacum Ancestry (M.Eubanks). History of Public Onion Breeding Programs in the United States (I.Goldman, et al.). Current and Future Issues in Lettuce Breeding (E. Ryder). Cactus Pear Domestication and Breeding (C. Jacobo). Somatic Hybridization and Applications in Plant Breeding (A.Johnson & R. Veilleux). Indexes.

    £278.96

  • Plant Breeding Reviews Volume 14

    John Wiley & Sons Inc Plant Breeding Reviews Volume 14

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisPresents state-of-the-art overviews on topics relating to the breeding of agriculturally and horticulturally important plants. This text monitors developments in plant breeding research and covers major field crops, horticultural crops and specialities such as mushrooms and nuts.Table of ContentsDedication: Donald N. Duvick, Maize Breeder, Geneticist, andAdministrator (A. Hallauer). Comparative Mapping of Plant Phenotypes (A. Paterson). Plant Antifungal Proteins (D.-J. Yun, et al.). Competitive Ability and Plant Breeding (D. Fasoula & V.Fasoula). Recurrent Selection Methods Based on Evaluation-cum-RecombinationBlock (S. Vasal, et al.). Utilization of Exotic Maize Germplasm (J. Parra & A.Hallauer). History, Genetics, and Breeding of Supersweet (shrunken2) SweetCorn (W. Tracy). Breeding Wild Rice (A. Grombacher, et al.). Plantain Improvement (D. Vuylsteke, et al.). Chrysanthemum Systematics, Genetics, and Breeding (M. Boase, etal.). Indexes.

    1 in stock

    £278.96

  • Plant Breeding Reviews Volume 12

    John Wiley & Sons Inc Plant Breeding Reviews Volume 12

    Book SynopsisPlant Breeding Reviews presents state-of-the-art reviews on plant genetics and the breeding of all types of crops by both traditional means and molecular methods. Many of the crops widely grown today stem from a very narrow genetic base; understanding and preserving crop genetic resources is vital to the security of food systems worldwide. The emphasis of the series is on methodology, a fundamental understanding of crop genetics, and applications to major crops. It is a serial title that appears in the form of one or two volumes per year.Table of ContentsDedication: Robert W. Allard, Population Geneticist and Agronomist(M. Clegg). Bacillus Thuringiensis and Its Use as a Biological Insecticide (A.Aronson). Development of Virus Resistant Plants via Engineering (R.Grumet). Carbon Isotope Discrimination and Plant Breeding (A. Hall, etal.). In Vitro Adaptation for Drought and Cold Hardiness in Wheat (G.Galiba). The Ideotype Concept and the Genetic Improvement of Tree Crops (D.Dickmann, et al.). Application of DNA Markers for Identification and Breeding ofPerennial Fruit Crops (U. Lavi, et al.). Heterosis in Plant Breeding (C. Stuber). Breeding of Seed-Planted Artichoke (J. Basnizki & D.Zohary). Concepts and Methods for Analyzing Regional Trial Data for Cultivarand Location Selection (C. Lin & M. Binns). Indexes.

    £278.96

  • Plant Breeding Reviews Volume 11

    John Wiley & Sons Inc Plant Breeding Reviews Volume 11

    2 in stock

    Book SynopsisPlant Breeding Reviews presents state-of-the-art reviews on plant genetics and the breeding of all types of crops by both traditional means and molecular methods. Many of the crops widely grown today stem from a very narrow genetic base; understanding and preserving crop genetic resources is vital to the security of food systems worldwide. The emphasis of the series is on methodology, a fundamental understanding of crop genetics, and applications to major crops. It is a serial title that appears in the form of one or two volumes per yearTable of ContentsDedication: John H. Weinberger--Fruit Breeder and Horticulturalist(D. Ramming & C. Fear). Reproductive Barriers: Identification, Uses, and Circumvention (B.Liedl & N. Anderson). Advances in Achieving the Needs for Biotechnologically-DerivedHerbicide Resistant Crops (J. Gressel). Another Culture of Maize (Y. Wan & J. Widholm). An Effective Wheat Gene Manipulation System: Problems and Uses (J.Gustafson & E. Sears). Molecular Biology and Wheat Improvement (L. Talbert). Breeding Systems for Cross-Pollinated Perennial Grasses (K. Vogel& J. Pedersen). Molecular Genetic Analysis of Nodulation Genes in Soybean (P.Gresshoff). Indexes.

    2 in stock

    £278.96

  • Horticultural Reviews 33

    John Wiley & Sons Inc Horticultural Reviews 33

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisHorticultural Reviews presents state-of-the-art reviews on topics in the horticultural sciences. The emphasis is on applied topics including the production of fruits, vegetables, nut crops, and ornamental plants of commercial importance. The title appears in the form of two volumes per year.Table of ContentsContributors. Dedication: Daniel J. Cantliffe (Peter J. Stoffella). 1. Genetic Resources of Kiwifruit: Domestication and Breeding (Hongwen Huang and A. Ross Ferguson). I. Introduction. II. Genetic Diversity and Germplasm Resources of Actinidia. III. Natural Distribution of Actinidia. IV. Domestication and Commercialization of Kiwifruit. V. Origins of Kiwifruit Cultivars. VI. From Genetic Diversity to Cultivar Development. Literature Cited. 2. Garlic: Botany and Horticulture (Rina Kamenetsky). I. Introduction. II. Variability and Genetic Resources. III. Plant Morphology and Effects of Environmental Factors on Annual Development. IV. Fertility Restoration and Seed Production. V. Propagation. VI. Chemical Composition, Medicinal and Neutraceutical Traits. VII. Horticultural Requirements. VIII. Postharvest Bulb Storage. IX. Concluding Remarks. Literature Cited. 3. Black Pepper: Botany and Horticulture (V. A. Parthasarathy, B. Sasikumar, R. R. Nair, and K. Johnson George). I. Introduction. II. Taxonomy, Morphology, and Cytology of Black Pepper. III. Horticulture. IV. Breeding. V. Biotechnology. Literature Cited. 4. Biology and Management of Weedy Root Parasites (D. M. Joel, J. Hershenhorn, H. Eizenberg, R. Aly, G. Ejeta, P. J. Rich, J. K. Ransom, J. Sauerborn, and D. Rubiales). I. Introduction. II. Economic Impact. III. Distribution. IV. Developmental Aspects. V. Management. VI. Concluding Remarks. Literature Cited. 5. Controlling Biotic Factors That Cause Postharvest Losses of Fresh Market Tomatoes (M. J. Mahovic, J. A. Bartz, and K. R. Schneider). I. Introduction. II. Factors Influencing Postharvest Loss. III. Sources and Means of Fruit Contamination During Harvest and Handling. IV. Controlling Biotic Hazards. V. Conclusions. Literature Cited. 6. The Master Gardener Program 1972–2005 (Mary Hockenberry Meyer). I. Introduction. II. Program Demographics. III. Program Activities. IV. Training and Management. V. Program Training and Management Costs. VI. Program Numbers and Impact. VII. Future Direction and Challenges. Literature Cited. Subject Index. Cumulative Subject Index. Cumulative Contributor Index.

    1 in stock

    £278.96

  • Horticultural Reviews 32

    John Wiley & Sons Inc Horticultural Reviews 32

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisHorticultural Reviews presents state-of-the-art reviews on topics in the horticultural sciences. The emphasis is on applied topics including the production of fruits, vegetables, nut crops, and ornamental plants of commerical importance. The title appears in the form of two volumes per year.Table of ContentsContributors. Dedication: Margaret Sedgley (Bryan Coombs). l. Analyzing Fruit Tree Architecture: Implications for Tree Management and Fruit Production (E. Costes, P. E. Lauri, and J. L. Regnard). I. Introduction. II. Architectural Analysis. III. Consequences of Tree Architecture for Tree Training, Orchard Management, and Fruit Production. IV. Conclusions. V. Glossary. Literature Cited. 2. Peach Orchard Systems (Richard P. Marini and Luca Corelli-Grappadelli). I. Introduction. II. Crop Physiology. III. Light Management. IV. Peach Orchard Systems. V. Vigor-Controlling Methods for Peach Trees. VI. Limitations to High Peach Yields. VII. Future Trends and Direction. Literature Cited. 3. Irrigation Scheduling and Evaluation of Tree Water Status in Deciduous Orchards (Amos Naor). I. Introduction. II. The Modern Irrigation Scheduling Concept. III. Deficit Irrigation. IV. Water Stress Assessment and Timing of Irrigation. V. Concluding Remarks. Literature Cited. 4. Leucadendron: A Major Proteaceous Floricultural Crop (Jaacov Ben-Jaacov and Avner Silber). I. Introduction. II. Botany of the Genus Leucadendron. III. World Industry and Economics. IV. Horticulture. V. Crop Potential and Research Needs. Literature Cited. 5. Chinese Jujube: Botany and Horticulture (Mengjun Liu). I. Introduction. II. Botany. III. Physiology. IV. Environmental Requirements. V. Horticulture. Literature Cited. 6. Taxus spp.: Botany, Horticulture, and Source of Anti-Cancer Compounds (John M. DeLong and Robert K. Prange). I. Introduction. II. Historical. III. Botany. IV. Horticulture. V. Pharmacology of Anti-Cancer Compounds from Taxus. VI. Conclusions. Literature Cited. 7. The Genus Allium: A Developmental and Horticultural Analysis (Rina Kamenetsky and Haim D. Rabinowitch). I. Introduction. II. Taxonomy and Geographical Distribution. III. Genetic Resources and Possible Use of Wild Allium Species. IV. Morphological Structures and Comparisons Between Biomorphological Groups. V. Plant Development. VI. Propagation. VII. Chemical Composition. VIII. Concluding Remarks. Literature Cited. 8. The Invasive Plant Debate: A Horticultural Perspective (Alex X. Niemiera and Guy Phillips). I. Introduction. II. Perspectives. III. Ecology of Invasive Species. IV. Regulatory Matters. V. Conclusion. Literature Cited. Appendix A. Subject Index. Cumulative Subject Index. Cumulative Contributor Index.

    1 in stock

    £278.96

  • Metabolism of Agrochemicals in Plants 7 Wiley

    John Wiley & Sons Inc Metabolism of Agrochemicals in Plants 7 Wiley

    Book SynopsisThe importance of understanding the metabolism of agrochemicals in plants has never been greater. In a world where food safety and environmental concerns are increasing, knowledge of the metabolic processes within plants and the terminal residues of agrochemicals in food crops is invaluable.Trade Review"...an essential text..." -- Biological Agriculture Horticulture, Vol 18, 2000 "The book can be recommended to research and advanced university students." --Journal of Agronomy & Crop Science, March 2001Table of ContentsIntroduction -- Regulatory Considerations (T. Roberts). Experimental Approaches for Plant Metabolism Studies (R. Baloch). Primary Metabolism of Agrochemicals in Plants (T. Katagi & N. Mikami). Secondary Metabolism of Agrochemicals in Plants (D. Cole & R. Edwards). Bound Residues Arising from the Use of Agrochemicals on Plants (M. Skidmore). The Comparative Metabolism of Agrochemicals in Plants and Mammals (S. Bounds & D. Hutson). Herbicide Metabolism as a Basis for Selectivity (W. Owen). Herbicide Safeners and Synergists (K. Hatzios). Index.

    £325.76

  • Aphids on the Worlds Crops An Identification and

    John Wiley & Sons Inc Aphids on the Worlds Crops An Identification and

    Book SynopsisThis is an identification guide and information source for a major group of agriculturally important insects on a world-wide basis. It enables the non-specialist anywhere in the world to identify aphids found colonising crop plants, and offers summaries of available knowledge of each species.Table of ContentsINTRODUCTORY SECTION. Introduction and Aims of the Book. Systematics. Life Cycles. Host-Plant Relationships. Geographical Distribution. Morphology and Key Characters. THE CROPS AND THEIR APHIDS. Notes on the Use of this Section. List of Crop Plants and their English Names. Lists and Keys to Aphids on Each Crop. THE APHIDS. Introduction to the Section. Systematic Treatment of Genera (Alphabetical). TECHNIQUES. Collecting. Preservation and Mounting. Labelling and Storage. SOURCES OF INFORMATION. Regionally Classified Faunal Works. General Biology. Morphology, Anatomy and Physiology. Genetics and Development. Migration and Dispersal. Relationships with Other Insects. Host-Plant Relationships. Control. Bibliographies. REFERENCES. PHOTOGRAPHIC GUIDE.

    £282.56

  • Practical Statistics and Experimental Design for

    John Wiley & Sons Inc Practical Statistics and Experimental Design for

    Book SynopsisThe only way to recommend new crop varieties, agrochemicals and husbandry systems is after they have been thoroughly tested in a series of replicated field trials. The trials, which are used to test these products or systems, need to be designed in such a way that the results obtained are reasonable and representative.Trade Review"...suitable for a practical course to science students wishing to appreciate statistical methods in agricultural and environmental research." (Short Book Reviews, Vol. 21, No. 2, August 2001) "...useful to undergraduate students..." (Zentralblatt MATH, Vol. 961, 2001/11)Table of ContentsPreface. Basic Principles of Experimentation. Basic Statistical Calculations. Basic Data Summary. The Normal Distribution, the t-Distribution and Confidence Intervals. Introduction to Hypothesis Testing. Comparison of Two Independent Sample Means. Linear Regression and Correlation. Curve Fitting. The Completely Randomised Design. The Randomised Block Design. The Latin Square Design. Factorial Experiments. Comparison of Treatment Means. Checking the Assumptions and Transformation of Data. Missing Values and Incomplete Blocks. Split Plot Designs Comparison of Regression Lines and Analysis of Covariance. Analysis of Counts. Some Non-parametric Methods. Appendix 1: The Normal Distribution Function. Appendix 2: Percentage Points of the Normal Distribution. Appendix 3: Percentage Points of the t-Distribution. Appendix 4a: 5 Per Cent Points of the F-Distribution. Appendix 4b: 2.5 Per Cent Points of the F-Distribution. Appendix 4c: 1 Per Cent Points of the F-Distribution. Appendix 4d: 0.1 Per Cent Points of the F-Distribution. Appendix 5: Percentage Points of the Sample Correlation Coefficient (r) When the Population Correlation Coefficient is 0 and n is the Number of X.Y. Pairs. Appendix 6: 5 Per Cent Points of the Studentised Range, for Use in Tukey and SNK Tests. Appendix 7: Percentage Points of the Chi-Square Distribution. Appendix 8: Probabilities of S or Fewer Successes in the Binomial Distribution with n 'trials' and p = 0.5. Appendix 9: Critical Values of T in the Wilcoxon Signed Rank or Matched Pairs Test. Appendix 10: Critical Values of U in the Mann-Whitney Test. References. Further Reading. Index.

    £63.86

  • Volatile Oil Crops

    John Wiley and Sons Ltd Volatile Oil Crops

    Book SynopsisVolatile (essential) oil crops yield a wide range of products - fresh and dried herbs, oils and oil components and various oleoresins. Changing lifestyles in developed countries have led to dramatic increases in demand for these products, particularly over the last decade.Table of ContentsPreface ix Acknowledgements xi List of Contributors xiii 1 Introduction 1R.K.M. Hay and K.P. Svoboda 2 Botany 5R.K.M. Hay and K.P. Svoboda 3 Physiology 23R.K.M. Hay 4 The Chemistry of Volatile Oils 47P.G. Waterman 5 Genetics 63Ch. Franz 6 Biological Activity of Volatile Oils 97S.G. Deans and P.G. Waterman 7 Biotechnology of Aromatic and Medicinal Plants 113K.P. Svoboda 8 Commercial Aspects 137N. Verlet Appendix: Commentary on the British Pharmacopoeia Monograph on Peppermint Oil 175 Botanical Species Index 177 Chemical Index 183

    £132.26

  • Coffee

    Wiley Coffee

    Book SynopsisCoffee: Recent Developments Edited by R.J. Clarke and O.G. Vitzthum Coffee, one of the most commercially important crops grown, is distributed and traded globally in a multi--million dollar world industry. This exciting new book brings together in one volume the most important recent developments affecting the crop.Trade Review?The editors of Coffee: Recent Developments have drawn together a comprehensive and extremely important book that should be on the shelves of all those involved in coffee.? ( Café Culture, September 2009)Table of ContentsPreface; List of Contributors; Chemistry I: Non-volatile compounds; Chemistry II: Non-volatile compounds; Chemistry III: Volatile compounds; Technology I: Roasting; Technology II: Decaffeination of coffee; Technology III: Instant Coffee: Technology IV: Beverage preparation; Health effects and safety considerations; Agronomy I: Coffee breeding Practices; Agronomy II: Developmental and cell biology; Agronomy III: Molecular Biology; Appendices: International Standards Organization (ISO); International Coffee Organization (ICO); Units and Numerals; Index

    £219.56

  • Cocoa

    John Wiley and Sons Ltd Cocoa

    Book SynopsisThe fourth edition of this highly regarded book has been considerably enlarged to cover all aspects of cocoa production. Higher prices for cocoa have led to much new knowledge about the plant and changes to its methods of production.Table of ContentsPreface vii Acknowledgements ix Note on Terminology x List of Plates xi List of Figures xv List of Maps xviii Glossary xix 1 History and development G. A. R. Wood 1 2 Botany, types and populations H. Toxopeus 11 3 Environment G. A. R. Wood 38 4 Planting material H. Toxopeus 80 5 Propagation G. A. R. Wood 93 6 Establishment G. A. R. Wood 119 7 Shade and nutrition M. Wessel 166 8 Maintenance and improvement of mature cocoa farms R. A. Lass 195 9 Replanting and rehabilitation of old cocoa farms R. A. Lass 210 10 Labour usage R. A. Lass 234 11 Diseases R. A. Lass 265 12 Insects and cocoa P. F. Entwistle 366 13 From harvest to store G. A. R. Wood 444 14 Quality and inspection G. A. R. Wood 505 15 Marketing A. P. Williamson 528 16 Production G. A. R. Wood 543 17 Consumption and manufacture G. A. R. Wood 587 Appendix 1 Visual Symptoms of Mineral Malnutrition 598 Appendix 2 International Cocoa Standards 601 Appendix 3 Conversion Factors 607 Appendix 4 Publications on Cocoa 608 Index 610

    £205.16

  • Pecan America  Exploring a Cultural Icon

    MP-KAN Uni Press of Kansas Pecan America Exploring a Cultural Icon

    2 in stock

    Book SynopsisInspired by the mystique of a uniquely American tree, the pecan, John Gifford set out to explore the US pecan industry. What he discovered during his two-year immersion was a nut that's poised to become the next superfood and an industry that today finds itself in the most important juncture in its history.Trade ReviewIn Pecan America, John Gifford takes an outwardly simple Subject, the pecan, and reveals its historical richness, ecological significance, and cultural Complexity. Pecan America is a delightful and informative journey into a beloved but at times misunderstood American food, and readers will be glad they accompanied Gifford on the adventure." - Stephanie Anderson, author of One Size Fits None: A Farm Girl's Search for the Promise of Regenerative Agriculture"If the thought of ancient midland groves that cheat the reaper of modernity electrifies you, then you'll appreciate Gifford’s road trip into the heart of pecan country." - George Frazier, author of The Last Wild Places of Kansas: Journeys into Hidden Landscapes

    2 in stock

    £26.96

  • Coffee

    John Wiley and Sons Ltd Coffee

    Book SynopsisIn a world of high finance, unprecedented technological change, and cyber billionaires, it is easy to forget that a major source of global wealth is, literally, right under our noses.Trade Review"Gavin Fridell�s insightful, well argued and up-to-date analysis of the world coffee economy demonstrates that the state�s role in coffee statecraft continues to be essential to creating a more just division of the earnings in the world of coffee. As well as providing a thorough guide to the economics and politics of one of the world�s most important commodities, this book will spark much needed debate about the nature of neoliberalism and market-based solutions to economic and social problems." Steven Topik, University of California Irvine"Gavin Fridell provides an invaluable, beautifully written and thoroughly engaging account of the contemporary global coffee market. I would recommend this work widely, not just for those interested in any aspect of the coffee economy but also for those interested in contemporary changes to the global economy or agrarian commodities."Economic GeographyTable of Contents1. The Global Market and Coffee Statecraft2. Making Coffee3. Pro-Poor Regulation4. Coffee Unleashed?5. Fair Trade and Corporate Power6. Coffee and the Non-Developmental State

    £12.99

  • Sugar

    John Wiley and Sons Ltd Sugar

    Book Synopsis* A new book in Polity's successful Resources series which tells the fascinating story of sugar in the global economy * Ambitious and intriguing, this book advances our understanding of the hugely profitable sugar industry and the economic exploitation and health issues associated with it.Trade Review�This is a fascinating interdisciplinary book and it covers much ground very well. It is well referenced and has a useful �further reading� section. I would recommend it for anyone interested in the good, the bad and the ugly of our globalized food system.�International Affairs "This is a fascinating interdisciplinary book and it covers much ground very well. It is well referenced and has a useful �further reading� section. I would recommend it for anyone interested in the good, the bad and the ugly of our globalized food system." Tim Benton, UK�s Global Food Security Programme and University of Leeds, UK "Ben Richardson�s Sugar is an intriguing survey of all things sugar, including consumption and foodways, the means of production, and how governments deal with their sugar industries and conduct their sugar-related international trade relations. True to his mission of providing a Marxist perspective, Richardson concludes by advocating for �reform from below.� Sugar draws on the scholarship of many sugar experts and will be a valuable resource for journalists and others researching sugar issues." Elizabeth Abbott, Author, Sugar: A Bittersweet History "Sugar has shaped our history and our politics; it affects our health, and influences the livelihoods of millions. Sugar is a lens on a fast-changing, globalised world, where the politics of agrarian change, international commerce, workers� rights and human health must be examined together. This is a fascinating book that both informs and challenges. Anyone interested in global politics, agriculture, business and social change and justice should read it." Ian Scoones, University of SussexTable of ContentsAcknowledgements 1. Introduction 2. Growing Markets, Growing Waistlines 3. Terminal Trade Dependency 4. Exploiting and Expelling Labour 5. Expanding and Exhausting Land 6. A Sweeter Deal for All? Selected Readings Notes

    £49.50

  • Soil Genesis and Classification

    John Wiley and Sons Ltd Soil Genesis and Classification

    Book SynopsisSoil Genesis and Classification, Sixth Edition, builds on the success of the previous editions to present an unparalleled resource on soil formation and classification. Featuring a color plate section containing multiple soil profiles, this text also includes information on new classification systems and emerging technologies and databases with updated references throughout. Covering the diverse needs of both the academic and professional communities, this classic text will be a must have reference for all those in soil science and related fields.Trade Review“You should buy it and persuade your library to buy it as well.” (European Journal of Soil Science, 1 December 2011) “The book is well suited for practicing and future soil scientist, geographers, geomorphologists, soil conservationists, sanity engineers, ecologists, foresters, agronomists, and archaeologists. Summing Up: Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates and above.” (Choice, 1 April 2012) Table of ContentsAuthors vii Preface to the First Edition ix Preface to the Second Edition x Preface to the Third Edition xi Preface to the Fourth Edition xiii Preface to the Fifth Edition xiv Preface to the Sixth Edition xv 1. Introduction 3 2. Morphology and Composition of Soils 35 3. Soil-forming Factors: Soil as a Component of Ecosystems 89 4. Soil Materials and Weathering 141 5. Soil-forming Processes 163 6. Modern Soil Classification Systems 181 7. U.S. Soil Taxonomy 207 8. Alfisols: High Base Status Soils with Finer-textured Subsoil Horizons 233 9. Andisols: Soils with Andic Soil Properties 249 10. Aridisols: Soils of Dry Regions 265 11. Entisols: Recently Formed Soils 283 12. Gelisols: Very Cold Soils 293 13. Histosols: Organic Soils 307 14. Inceptisols: Embryonic Soils with Few Diagnostic Features 321 15. Mollisols: Grassland Soils of Steppes and Prairies 331 16. Oxisols: Low Activity Soils 349 17. Spodosols: Soils with Subsoil Accumulations of Humus and Sesquioxides 361 18. Ultisols: Low Base Status Soils with Finer-textured Subsoil Horizons 375 19. Vertisols: Shrinking and Swelling Dark Clay Soils 385 20. Spatial Arrangement of Soils: Soilscapes and Map Units 397 21. Interpretations of Soil Surveys and Technical Soil Classification 425 Bibliography 437 Index 531 Color plate section located between pages 232 and 233

    £84.56

  • Conservation Tillage and Cropping Innovation

    John Wiley and Sons Ltd Conservation Tillage and Cropping Innovation

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisA sociological study of changing farming methods, Conservation Tillage and Cropping Innovation investigates those techniques that have gradually continued to replace the plow culture. With thorough documentation of the conservation tillage and cropping revolution, this book features chapters on: The Social Construction of Innovative Networks; Planning Conservation Cropping: Implications for Research, Development, and Extension; The New Agriculture of Conservation Cropping: Present and Future.Table of ContentsForeword; Preface; Acknowledgments; Introduction; Conceptualizing System Innovation: Social Construction of Conservation Tillage and Cropping; Plow Culture in the United States and Australia; Farming in the 1950s: The Driving Forces; The Social Construction of Innovative Networks; Social Construction of New Tillage and Cropping Systems in the united States; The Construction of New Tillage Systems in Australia; The Spread of Conservation Tillage in Kentucky and Queensland; Reconstructing the Farm Landscape: The Spread of Conservation Tillage in the United States; Planning Conservation Cropping: Implications for Research, Development, and Extension; The New Agriculture of Conservation Cropping: Present and Future; Bibliography; Acronyms; Index.

    1 in stock

    £99.86

  • Potato Genetics

    CABI Publishing Potato Genetics

    Book SynopsisThe potato is economically a very important crop in many parts of the world. All improvements through potato breeding or biotechnology must be based on a thorough knowledge of potato genetics. This book fills a major gap in the current literature for an up-to-date account of this topic and its implications for crop improvement. Written by authorities from the UK, USA, Canada, Peru, Netherlands, Germany, Sweden and Poland, this major reference work will be indispensible for workers in plant genetics, breeding and biotechnology.Table of Contents1: Production of monohaploids of Solanum tuberosum L. and their use ingenetics, molecular biology and breeding, E Jacobsen and M S RamannaCellular and molecular genetics 2: Tissue culture, G Wenzel 3: Somaclonal variation, A Kumar 4: Molecular genetics, K N WatanabeEnvironmental stress, morphology and quality 5: Environmental stress and its impact on potato yield, M E Vayda 6: Inheritance of morphological and tuber characteristics, R Ortiz and ZHuaman 7: Inheritance of table and processing quality, M F B Dale and G R MackayInheritance of resistance to pests and diseases 8: Inheritance of resistance to nematodes, M.S. Phillips 9: Inheritance of resistance to viruses, K M Swiezynski 10: Inheritance of resistance to late blight, V Umaerus and M Umaerus 11: Inheritance of resistance to warm-growing-season fungal diseases, J JPavek and D L Corsini 12: Inheritance of resistance to fungal diseases of tubers, R L Wastie 13: Inheritance of resistance to bacterial diseases, J G Elphinstone 14: Inheritance of resistance to insects and mites, K V Raman et al.Potato breeding 15: Breeding strategies for clonally propagated potatoes, J E Bradshaw and GR Mackay 16: Breeding potatoes based on true seed propagation, A M Golmirzaie, PMalagamba and N Pallais 17: Introgression of genes from wild species, including molecular and cellularapproaches, J G Th Hermsen

    £159.84

  • Grassland Nitrogen

    CABI Publishing Grassland Nitrogen

    Book SynopsisThis book provides a comprehensive overview of grassland nitrogen incorporating information from crop science, soils and fertilizers, ruminant consumption and environmental aspects. The published information is reviewed on the various transformations of nitrogen in temperate grassland systems. These include those taking place in soils. The effects of soil, weather and management practices are discussed and considerable emphasis is placed on soil-plant-animal interactions. A second aim of the book is to describe the factors that influence the response of grassland to the application of fertilizer nitrogen, and how the optimum rate of application may be determined. In addition, nitrogen balances are described for different grassland systems, showing how the annual inputs and outputs vary greatly depending on sward type and management. The book is of interest to a wide readership, especially those engaged in research, teaching and advisory work, and students taking courses in agriculturalTable of Contents1: Grasses: uptake of nitrogen and effects on morphology and physiology 2: Legumes: biological nitrogen fixation and interaction with grasses 3: Consumption, digestion and excretion of nitrogen by ruminant livestock 4: Amounts, sources and fractionation of organic nitrogen in soils 5: Mineralization, immobilization and availability of nitrogen in soils 6: Leaching of nitrogen from soils 7: Volatilization of ammonia 8: Volatilization of gaseous nitrogen and nitrogen oxides through denitrification and nitrification 9: Use of fertilizer nitrogen and slurry nitrogen on grasslands: recovery and response 10: Response to fertilizer nitrogen: influence of sward type, pattern of fertilizer application and method of harvesting 11: Response to fertilizer nitrogen: influence of weather, seasonal factors and soil type 12: Response to fertilizer nitrogen: influence of type of fertilizer and supplies of other nutrients 13: Influence of fertilizer nitrogen on the composition and nutritional quality of grassland herbage 14: Nitrogen balances in contrasting grassland systems

    £116.68

  • Coffee Cocoa and Tea

    CABI Publishing Coffee Cocoa and Tea

    Book SynopsisWhile botanically quite different, coffee, cocoa and tea are often considered together in the teaching of students of horticulture or agriculture. This is because all three represent plantation cash crops that are used as stimulant beverages and are grown in many of the warmer, less developed regions of the world. While there are a number of specialist books available on aspects of each individual crop, as well as grower manuals focusing on particular regions, there is currently no book that provides a general introductory overview of the scientific principles underlying production of all three crops. This book fills this gap, and will serve as a broad-based text for students of agriculture, horticulture and food science, as well as professionals seeking an overview of the topic.Table of ContentsPart I: Introduction and Overview 1.1: Stimulant Beverage Crops 1.2: Origins and Distribution of Coffee, Cocoa and Tea 1.3: Production and Markets Part II: Coffee 2.1: Botany and Plant Improvement 2.2: Climatic Requirements, Soil Requirements and Management 2.3: Field Management 2.4: Mineral Nutrition and Fertilizers 2.5: Pests, Diseases and Weed Control Part III: Cocoa 3.1: Botany and Plant Improvement 3.2: Climatic Requirements, Soil Requirements and Management 3.3: Field Management 3.4: Mineral Nutrition and Fertilizers 3.5: Pests, Diseases and Weed Control Part IV: Tea 4.1: Botany and Plant Improvement 4.2: Climatic Limitations, Soil Requirements and Management 4.3: Field Management 4.4: Mineral Nutrition and Fertilizers 4.5: Pests, Diseases and Weed Control Part V: Processing 5.1: Crop Processing at the Plantation and for Retail Sale

    £54.48

  • Cherries Crop Physiology Production and Uses

    CABI Publishing Cherries Crop Physiology Production and Uses

    Book SynopsisThe sweet cherry is one of the most popular of temperate fruit crops with consumers and is grown commercially in more than 40 countries of the world, in temperate, Mediterranean, subtropical and arid regions of all continents. The sour cherry is cultivated in fewer countries, mainly in Europe and the USA, and is used mainly in processed cherry products. Until recently, horticultural improvement of cherries as a commercial crop has been slow, and major production problems such as bird damage, rain-induced cracking, and bacterial diseases, have remained. However, in the last 25 years, major developments have occurred. New improved varieties of sweet cherry have been bred which have larger fruit, are more disease resistant and set fruit more reliably. Improved sour cherry varieties have also been bred and mechanised systems of harvesting introduced. New dwarfing rootstocks are now being released. This book provides a comprehensive review of all of these topics, and many more. It covers alTable of ContentsPart One: Introduction 1: The taxonomic classification of sweet and sour cherries and a brief history of their cultivation, A D Webster 2: World distribution of sweet and sour cherry production: national statistics, A D Webster and N E Looney Part Two: Plant Materials 3: Sweet cherry scions: characteristics of principal commercial cultivars, breeding objectives and methods, G Bargioni 4: Sour cherries cultivars: objectives and methods of fruit breeding and characteristics of principal commercial cultivars, A Iezzoni 5: Rootstocks for sweet and sour cherries, A D Webster and H Schmidt Part Three: Crop Physiology and Husbandry 6: Propagation of sweet and sour cherries, A D Webster 7: Selection of the orchard site, orchard planning and establishment, M Longstroth and R L Perry 8: Flowering , pollination and fruit set, M Thompson 9: Cherry nutrient requirements and water relations, E J Hanson and E L Proebsting 10: Tree canopy management and the orchard environment, principles and practices of pruning and training, J A Flore and C D Kesner 11: Principles and practice of plant bioregulator usage in cherry production, N E Looney 12: Rain-induced cracking of sweet cherries; its causes and prevention, J Vittrup Christensen Part Four: Crop Protection 13: Orchard floor vegetation management, E J Hogue and N E Looney 14: Cherry diseases: their prevention and control, G I Mink and A L Jones 15: Management and control of insect and mite pests of cherry, J F Brunner 16: Sweet cherries: protection of fruit from bird and rain damage, D Pennell and A D Webster Part Five: Harvesting, Handling and Utilization 17: Harvesting and handling of sweet cherries for the fresh market, N E Looney, A D Webster and E M Kupferman 18: Harvesting and handling sour and sweet cherries for processing, G K Brown and G Kollar 19: Cherry processing, K Kaack, S E Spayd and S R Drake 20: Index

    £169.78

  • Soybean

    CABI Publishing Soybean

    Book SynopsisSoybean is one of the world's leading sources of seed oil and seed protein and is grown extensively, particularly in the Americas and Asia. Indeed, soybean is the lowest-cost producer of vegetable oil, since the oil is a coproduct of its protein-rich meal. Major advances have recently been made in our understanding of soybean genetics and of the application of new technologies to soybean improvement. Thus it is now possible, using molecular methods, to alter the protein and oil composition of soybean, as well as produce other foreign proteins in the plant. Further progress should permit the improvement of nitrogen fixation and other desirable traits. This book focuses on recent progress in our understanding of the genetics and molecular biology of soybean and provides a broad review of the subject, from genome diversity to transformation and integration of desired genes using current technologies. It is aimed at workers in legume agronomy, plant genetics, breeding and biotechnology.Table of Contents1: Germplasm Diversity within Soybeans, R G Palmer, T Hymowitz and R LNelson 2: Molecular Genetic Mapping of Soybean, R C Shoemaker, K M Polzen and J ESpecht 3: Cytoplasmic Genetics in the Legumes (Fabaceae), with Special Reference toSoybean, S A Mackenzie 4: Plant Transposable Elements: Potential Application for Gene Tagging inSoybean, L O Vodkin 5: Limitations and Potentials of Genetic Manipulations of Soybean, J ESpecht and G L Graef 6: In vitro Selection and Culture-induced Variation in Soybean, J M Widholm 7: Soybean Seed Composition, N C Nielsen 8: Genetic Modification of Soybean Oil Quality, N S Yadav 9: Molecular Genetic Analysis of Soybean Nodulation Mutants, P M Gresshoff 10: Improvement of Soybean for Nitrogen Fixation: Molecular Genetics ofNodulation, A J Delauney and D P S Verma 11: Soybean Transformation: Technologies and Progress, J J Finer, T-S Chengand D P S Verma"

    £116.68

  • Valuing Crop Biodiversity

    CABI Publishing Valuing Crop Biodiversity

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisThis book examines the challenges faced by farmers trying to maintain crop biodiversity in developing and transitional economies. Using a collection of empirical case studies of farmers and crop scientists across a range of agricultural economies and income levels, it presents economic tools and methods for valuing and managing crop biodiversity. It discusses the economic benefits of crop biodiversity for farmers and suggests ways in which crop biodiversity can be supported by national policies. The book provides an indispensable 'tool kit' for all those concerned with the development of strategies to facilitate sustainable management and conservation of crop genetic diversity for future generations.Table of ContentsI: Preface, J von Braun and E Frison Part I: Introduction 1: Concepts, Metrics, and Plan of the Book, M Smale Part II: Private Value: Stated Preferences of Farmers 2: Crop valuation and farmer response to change: Implications for in situ conservation of maize in Mexico, G Dyer, CIECO, Mexico 3: Farmer demand for agricultural biodiversity in Hungary's transition economy: A Choice experiment approach , E Birol and A Kontoleon, University of Cambridge, UK, and M Smale 4: Demand for attributes and on farm conservation of coffee in Ethiopia, E Wale, Alemaya University, Ethiopia and J Mburu, University of Bonn, Germany Part III: Private Value: Revealed Preferences of Farmers 5: Missing markets, migration and crop biodiversity in the Mexican milpa system: A household farm model, M E Van Dusen, Berkeley, California, USA 6: Determinants of cereal diversity on household farms in the highlands of northern Ethiopia, S Benin, IFPRI, Uganda, M Smale and J Pender, IFPRI, Washington DC, USA 7: Demand for cultivar attributes and the biodiversity of bananas in Uganda , S Edmeades, IFPRI, Washington DC, USA, M Smale, and D Karamura, INIBAP, Uganda 8: Farmer management of agricultural biodiversity in Hungary's transition economy, E Birol, M Smale and Á Gyovai, Institute for Agrobotany, Hungary 9: Rural development and the diversity of potatoes on farms in Cajamarca, Peru, P Winters, American University, USA, L H Hintze, Inter-American Development Bank, USA, and O Ortiz, International Potato Center, Peru Part IV: Public Values, Villages and Institutions 10: Managing rice biodiversity on farms: The choices of farmers and breeders in Nepal, D Gauchan, Nepal Agricultural Research Council, Nepal, M Smale, N Maxted and M Cole, University of Birmingham, UK 11: Determinants of cereal diversity in villages of Northern Ethiopia, B Gebremedhin, International Livestock Research Institute (ILRI), Ethiopia, M Smale and J Pender 12: Social institutions and seed systems: the diversity of fruits and nuts in Uzbekistan, E Van Dusen, E Dennis, Indiana University, USA, M Lee, J Ilyasov, S Treshkin IPGRI-CWANA, Uzbekistan, and M Smale 13: Village seed systems and the biological diversity of millet crops in southern India, L Nagarajan, IFPRI, Washington DC, USA, and M Smale 14: Seeds supply and on farm demand for diversity: a case study of Eastern Ethiopia , L Lipper, R Cavatassi, FAO, Rome, Italy and P Winters 15: Institutions, stakeholders, and the management of crop genetic sources on Hungarian family farms, G Bela, B Balázs, Institute of Environmental and Landscape Management, Hungary, and G Pataki, St Istvan University, Hungary 16: Cooperatives, wheat diversity and crop productivity in southern Italy, S Di Falco, IFPRI, Washington DC, USA and C Perrings, University of York, UK Part V: Conclusions 17: Scope, limitations and future directions, M Smale, L Lipper and P Koundouri, University of Reading, UK 18: An annotated bibliography of published literature about the economics of conserving crop biological diversity on farms, P Zambrano, IFPRI, Washington DC, USA, and M Smale

    1 in stock

    £98.68

  • Plant Adaptation and Crop Improvement

    CABI Publishing Plant Adaptation and Crop Improvement

    Book SynopsisThis book discusses various plant adpatations and techniques for crop improvement.Table of ContentsSection 1: An Overview of Crop Improvement 1: Plant Adaptation, Biodiversity, and Crop Improvement Strategies – Introductory Remarks 2: Understanding Plant Adaptation to Achieve Systematic Applied Crop Improvement – A Fundamental Challenge 3: Research Approaches for Variable Rainfed Systems – Thinking Globally, Acting Locally Section 2: Analysis of Genotype by Environment Interactions 4: Analysis of Multi-environment Trials – An Historical Perspective 5: Experimental Design and Analysis for Variety Trails 6: International Network for Genetic Evaluation of Rice (INGER) and its Modus Operandi for Multi-environment Testing 7: International Multi-environment Trials at the International Crop Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics (ICRISAT) 8: The CIMMYT Wheat Program’s International Multi-environment Trials 9: Analysis and Interpretation of Data from the Crop Variety Testing Program in Western Australia 10: Relationships Among Analytical Methods Used to Analyse Genotypic Adaptation in Multi-environment Trials 11: Methods of Data Standardisation Used in Pattern Analysis and ANMI Models for the Analysis of International Multi-environment Variety Trials 12: Retrospective Analysis of Historical Data Sets from Multi-environment Trials – Theoretical Development 13: Retrospective Analysis of Historical Data Sets from Multi-environment Trials – Case Studies 14: Three-mode Analytical Methods for Crop Improvement Programs 15: Selection for Grain Quality Traits in Early Generation Barley Breeding Trials using Residual Maximum Likelihood (REML) 16: The International Crop Information System (ICIS) – Connects Genebank to Breeder to Farmer’s Field Section 3: Interpretation of Genotype by Environment Interactions 17: The Physiological Basis of Genotype by Environment Interaction in Crop Adaptation 18: Characterising Environmental Challenges Using Models 19: A Physiological Approach to the Understanding of Genotype by Environment Interactions – A Case Study on Improvement of Drought Adaptation in Groundnut 20: Integrating Genotype by Environment Interaction Analysis, Characterisation of Drought Patterns, and Farmer Preferences to Identify Adaptive Plant Traits for Pearl Millet 21: Using Simulation Models to Design New Plant Types and to Analyse Genotype by Environment Interactions in Rice 22: Integrating Physiological Understanding and Plant Breeding via Crop Modelling and Optimization 23: Comparing Simulation of Experimental Approaches to Analysing Genotype by Environment Interactions for Yield in Rainfed Lowland Rice Section 4: Integrated Approaches to Plant Improvement 24: Positive Interaction of Genotype by Environment Interactions in Relation to Sustainability and Biodiversity 25: A Strategy for Yield Improvement of Wheat which Accommodates Large Genotype by Environment Interactions 26: Pattern Analysis of Gains from Selection for Drought Tolerance in Tropical Maize Populations 27: Environmental Characterisation Based on Probe and Reference Genotypes 28: The Importance of Environmental Characterisation for Understanding Genotype by Environment Interactions 29: Using Simulation Models and Spatial Databases to Improve the Efficiency of Plant Breeding Programs Section 5: Synthesis of Strategies for Crop Improvement 30: Synthesis of Strategies for Crop Improvement

    £138.01

  • Soilborne Diseases of Tropical Crops

    CABI Publishing Soilborne Diseases of Tropical Crops

    Book SynopsisSoilborne diseases have, until recently, received less attention than plant diseases affecting the shoot and foliage. However, this is not a reflection of their economic importance, but rather of difficulties in investigating and detecting pathogens below soil level. Many soilborne diseases are stress related and it is in the tropics where crop growth is particularly limited by environmental stress, predisposing crops to infection by soilborne pathogens. There is thus a great need for information on soilborne diseases of crops in the tropics. This book aims to fill this need by providing reviews of relevant research. It covers the major tropical crops and also includes general chapters on principles, ecology and control. Written by leading research workers from countries including the UK, USA, Australia and India, it will be indispensable for plant pathologists working in this area.Table of ContentsPart 1: INTRODUCTION 1: Soilborne Diseases and Their Importance in Tropical Agriculture R J Hillocks, Natural Resources Institute, University of Greenwich, Kent, UK and J M Waller, International Mycological Institute, Egham, Surrey UK 2: Field and Laboratory Methods for Studying Soilborne Diseases J A G Irwin, Cooperative Research Centre for Tropical Plant Pathology, University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia Part 2: SOILBORNE DISEASES OF SPECIFIC CROPS 3: Cereal Crops D R Sumner, College of Agriculture and Environmental Sciences, Georgia Agricultural Experiment Stations, Tifton, Georgia, USA 4: Food Legumes D J Allen, Honiton, Devon, UK 5: Root and Tuber Crops S A Simons, CAB INTERNATIONAL, Regional Office for Africa, Nairobi, Kenya 6: Vegetable Crops G L Hartman, US Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service, University of Illinois, Urbana, USA and L E Datnoff, University of Florida, Belle Glade, Florida, USA 7: Bananas and Plantains S R Gowen, University of Reading, Crop Protection Research Unit, Reading, UK 8: Citrus J A Menge, University of California, Riverside, California, USA and S Nemec, United States Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service, Orlando, Florida, USA 9: Beverage Crops and Palms J M Waller and M Holderness, International Mycological Institute, Egham, Surrey, UK 10: Annual Oilseed Crops S J Kolte, G.B. Pant University of Agriculture and Technology, Nainital, Uttar Pradesh, India 11: Sugarcane B T Egan, R C Magarey, and B J Croft, Bureau of Sugar Experimental Stations (BSES), Indooroopilly, Queensland, Australia 12: Cotton and Tropical Fibres R J Hillocks 13: Rubber A de S Liyanage, Rubber Research Institute, Agalawatta, Sri Lanka, currently at Australian Plant Quarantine and Inspection Service, Barton, Canberra, Australia. Part 3: ECOLOGY AND CONTROL 14: Associations between Soilborne Pathogens and other Soil-Inhabiting Microorganisms R J Hillocks and J M Waller 15: Abiotic Factors and Soilborne Diseases C M Liddell, New Mexico State University, Las Cruces, New Mexico, USA 16: Effect of Cultivation Practices and Cropping Systems on Soilborne Diseases J Palti, Agricultural Research Organisation, Bet Dagan, Israel and J Katan, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Rehovot , Israel 17: Chemical and Biological Control R Rodríguez-Kábana and N Kokalis-Burelle, Auburn University, College of Agriculture, Department of Plant Pathology, Auburn, Alabama, USA 18: Host-plant Resistance and Integrated Control J M Waller and R J Hillocks

    £128.07

  • Essential Oil Crops

    CABI Publishing Essential Oil Crops

    Book SynopsisPlants producing an aromatic oil, fruit, or seed have been used in religious ceremonies, for personal use and adornment, and for flavouring throughout history. There is now also world-wide pressure by consumers to use perceived natural compounds in edible and personal products. It is vital that producers should be able to service this growing demand efficiently, economically and above all reliably. Many essential oil crops are part of the economy of countries with expanding populations, resulting in increasing pressure on land to produce food and fuel. It is thus important to ensure the optimum social and economic benefit from establishing and growing essential oil crops. This book is concerned with growing essential oil plants profitably to obtain an aromatic derivative. Each chapter covers a different family. A brief history of the use and economic development is given, and cultivation, harvesting and distilling described. Results of current research and recommendations for improved Table of Contents1: World Trade in Essential Oils 2: Annonaceae 3: Geraniaceae 4: Gramineae 5: Lamiaceae 6: Lauraceae 7: Myristicaceae 8: Myrtaceae 9: Oleaceae 10: Piperaceae 11: Rosaceae 12: Rutaceae 13: Santalaceae 14: Zingiberaceae 15: Distilling and Extracting Essential Oils

    £138.01

  • Driven By Nature

    CABI Publishing Driven By Nature

    Book SynopsisBiological management of nutrient supply to plants is intrinsically more complex than the provision of nutrients as inorganic fertilizers. We need to know whether the nutrients released are retained or lost from the system, whether rates of decomposition can be manipulated to improve nutrient use efficiency, and how the various fractions of plant residues translate into pools of organic matter in soil. Only then can predictive models for nutrient release, plant uptake and soil organic matter dynamics be truly tested and validated. This book brings together contemporary ideas on the characterization and manipulation of plant quality and especially its role in soil organic matter formation and nutrient cycling. It contains work from the leading workers in both temperate and tropical systems. There are also contributions describing work outside decomposition in soil ecosystems, such as the work of plant biochemists and animal nutritionists, as research in these areas has provided many ideTable of ContentsPart 1: Review: Any Progress? 1: Plant Litter Quality and Decomposition: An Historical Overview, O W Heal, J M Anderson and M J Swift Part 2: Pathways and Processes in Litter Decomposition 2: Fungal Degradation of Lignin, K E Hammel 3: Plant Degradation by Ruminants: Parallels with Litter Decomposition in Soil, A Chesson 4: Role of Phenolic Secondary Metabolics in Plants and their Degradation in Nature, J B Harborne 5: Decomposition Induced Changes in the Chemical Structure of Fallen Red Pine, White Spruce and Tamarack Logs, J A Baldock, T Sewell and P G Hatcher 6: Solid-state NMR Investigations of Organic Transformations During the Decomposition of Plant Material in Soil, D W Hopkins and J A Chudek 7: Kinetically Defined Litter Fractions Based on Respiration Measurements, H Marstorp Part 3: Foraging, Feeding and Feedbacks 8: Linkages Between Soil Biota, Plant Litter Quality and Decomposition, D A Wardle and P Lavelle 9: Soil Fauna-mediated Decomposition of Plant Residues Under Constrained Environmental and Residue Quality Conditions, G Tian, L Brussaard, B T Kang and M J Swift 10: Relationships Between Litter Fauna and Chemical Changes of Litter During Decomposition Under Different Moisture Conditions, C Wachendorf, U Irmler and H -P Blume 11: Metabolic Interactions in Plant Litter Systems, J S Waid Part 4: Manipulation of Plant Litter Quality 12: Residue Quality and Decomposition: An Unsteady Relationship?, B Vanlauwe, J Drels, N Sangina and R Merckx 13: Effect of Multipurpose Trees, Age of Cutting and Drying Method on Pruning Quality, P Mafongoya, B H Dzowela and P K Nair 14: Regulating N Mineralization from Plant Residues by Manipulation of Quality, E Handayanto, G Cadisch and K E Giller 15: Climate Change: The Potential to Affect Ecosystem Functions Through Changes in Amount and Quality of Litter, W J Arp, P J Kuikman and A Gorissen 16: Progress and Potential for Genetic Manipulation of Plant Quality, A Bavage, I G Davies, M P Robbins and P Morris Part 5: Synchrony and Soil Organic Matter 17: Synchrony of Nutrient Release and Plant Demand: Plant Litter Quality, Soil Environment and Farmer Management Options, R J K Myers, M van Noordwijk and P Vityakon 18: Synchronizing Residue N Mineralization with Rice N Demand in Flooded Conditions, M Becker and J K Ladha 19: Management of Leguminous Leaf Residues to Improve Nutrient Use Efficiency in the Sub-humid Tropics, R B Jones, S S Snapp and H S K Phombeya Part 6: Building Soil Organic Matter 20: Characterization of Soil Organic Matter by Solid-state 13C NMR Spectroscopy, J O Skjemstad, P Clarke, A Golchin and J M Oades 21: Development and Use of a Carbon Management Index to Monitor Changes in Soil C Pool Size and Turnover Rate, G J Blair, R D B Lefroy, B P Singh and A R Till 22: Long-term Vegetation Management in Relation to Accumulation and Mineralization of Nitrogen in Soils, J Z Burket and R P Dick 23: Phosphorus Mineralization and Organic Matter Decomposition: A Critical Review, N Gressel and J G McColl Part 7: Modelling: Providing the Framework 24: Modelling Litter Quality Effects on Decomposition and Soil Organic Matter Dynamics, K Paustian, G Ågren and E Bosatta 25: Simulating the Mineralization of N from Crop Residues in Relation to Residue Quality, A P Whitmore and E Handayanto 26: Modelling the Measurable: Interpretation of Field-scale CO2 and N-Mineralization, Soil Microbial Biomass and Light Fractions as Indicators of Oilseed Rape, Maize and Barley Straw Decomposition, J Magid, T Mueller, L S Jensen and N E Nielson 27: Synthesis of Litter Quality and Enzymic Approaches to Decomposition Modelling, R L Sinsabaugh and D L Moorhead Part 8: Outlook 28: A Minimum Dataset for Characterization of Plant Quality for Decomposition, C A Palm and A P Rowland 29: Driven by Nature: A Sense of Arrival or Departure?, K E Giller and G Cadisch

    £133.06

  • Wheat Production and Utilization

    CABI Publishing Wheat Production and Utilization

    Book SynopsisThe domestication of wheat, more than any other plant, has allowed food to be produced in sufficient quantities to support community settlement, cultural development and population growth. Wheat is one of the major sources of energy, protein and dietary fibre in human nutrition. This book comprehensively describes how wheat is produced and used. It begins with a consideration of how the different grain characteristics influence the subsequent utilization of the harvested wheat. A large part of the book is then devoted to advice and discussion concerning establishing, managing and harvesting a successful crop, including the control of disease, and the use of wheat as forage. There is also a thorough consideration of the storage and use of the crop post-harvest. Wheat is grown and used throughout the world and the book reflects this by containing examples from many different countries. Research on the impact of the environment on the quality of the grain is presented and discussed, and tTable of Contents1: An Introduction to the Utilization, Development and Production of Wheat 2: Grain Characters Influencing Utilization 3: Genotypic Effects on Grain Quality: Species and Varieties 4: The Crop Environment and Grain Quality: Weather and Soils 5: Crop Establishment 6: Crop Nutrition and Fertilizer Use 7: Biology and Control of Diseases, Weeds and Pests: Effects on Grain Yield and Quality 8: Postharvest Management of Grain 9: Wheat Vegetation as Forage 10: Ethanol, Starch and Gluten Production

    £96.30

  • Phosphorus Loss from Soil to Water

    CABI Publishing Phosphorus Loss from Soil to Water

    Book SynopsisPhosphorus is an essential element for plant growth and its input has long been recognised as necessary to maintain profitable crop production. However, phosphorus inputs can also increase the biological activity of surface waters and this can lead to the destruction of such aquatic ecosystems. Advanced eutrophication of surface water leads to problems with its use for fisheries, recreation, industry and drinking, due to the increased growth of undesirable algae and aquatic weeds, and oxygen shortages caused by their death and decomposition. It is therefore important to have a good understanding of the causes and mode of phosphorus loss from soil to water, to enable the problems to be controlled and managed. This book has been developed from an international workshop held in Ireland in late 1995. It is the first comprehensive consideration of the topic, and many leading researchers in the area have contributed to it. It is essential reading for all soil scientists and freshwater biologTable of Contents1: Contributors 2: Preface 3: Acknowledgements 4: Phosphorus in Agriculture and Its Environmental Implications, A Sharpley and S Rekolainen 6: Estimating the Contribution from Agriculture to the Phosphorus Load in Surface Water , S D Lennox, R H Foy, R V Smith and C Jordan 7: Phosphorus Losses from Agriculture to Surface Waters in the Nordic Countries S Rekolainen, P Ekholm, B Ulén and A Gustafson 8: Reconstructing Historical Phosphorus Concentrations in Rural Lakes Using Diatom Models N J Anderson 9: The Dynamics of Phosphorus in Freshwater and Marine Environments, C E Gibson 10: The Behaviour of Soil and Fertilizer Phosphorus, M A Morgan 11: Setting and Justifying Upper Critical Limits for Phosphorus in Soils, E Sibbesen and A N Sharpley 12: Phosphorus Fertilizer Strategies: Present and Future, H Tunney, A Breeuwsma, P Withers and P Ehlert 13: Sources and Pathways of Phosphorus Loss from Agriculture, A L Heathwaite 14: Hydrological and Chemical Controls on Phosphorus Loss from Catchments H P Pionke, W J Gburek, A N Sharpley and J A Zollweg 15: Movement of Phosphorus from Agricultural Soil to Water, B Pommel and J M Dorioz 16: Losses of Phosphorus in Drainage Water, P C Brookes, G Heckrath, J De Smet, G Hofman and J Vanderdeelen 17: Sustainable Phosphorus Management in Agriculture, G Bertilsson and C Forsberg 18: Phosphorus Requirements for Animal Production, P B Lynch and P J Caffrey 19: Nutrient Management Planning, T C Daniel, O T Carton and W L Magette 20: A European Fertilizer Industry View on Phosphorus Retention and Loss from Agricultural Soils, I Steén 21: European Perspective on Phosphorus and Agriculture, F Mariën 22: Views on Phosphorus and Agriculture - Paris Commission, S Sadowski 23: Phosphorus Loss in Runoff, Leaching and Erosion, Poster Chapter 24: Catchment Studies, Modelling and Management, Poster Chapter 25: Phosphorus Status of Soils and Fertilizer Recommendations, Poster Chapter 26: Phosphorus Loss from Agriculture to Water: Synthesis and Summary, A E Johnston, H Tunney and R H Foy 27: Index

    £133.06

  • Biological Indicators of Soil Health

    CABI Publishing Biological Indicators of Soil Health

    Book SynopsisMaintaining soil health is fundamental to successful crop production and ecosystem sustainability. To enable effective management soil health must first be measured and then monitored and so the authors review and evaluate how soil organisms can be used to fulfil this role. This book is essential for all soil scientists and consultants. It is of particular relevance to those involved in soil health monitoring and maintenance as well as those undertaking soil remediation. It is also important reading for agronomists, ecologists and environmentalists. This book is a comprehensive and effective resource for all those working to sustain healthy soils.Table of Contents1: Defining and Assessing Soil Health and Sustainable Productivity 2: Soil Health: its Relationship to Ecosystem Health D J Rapport 3: Rationale for Developing Bioindicators of Soil Health 4: Bioindicators: Perspectives and Potential Value for Landusers 5: Soil Microbial Biomass, Activity and Nutrient Cycling as Indicators of Soil Health 6: Soil Enzyme Activities as Integrative Indicators of Soil Health 7: Soil Microflora as Bioindicators of Soil Health 8: Potential Use of Plant Root Pathogens as Bioindicators of Soil Health 9: Soil Microfauna as Bioindicators of Soil Health 10: Community Structure of Soil Arthropods as a Bioindicator of Soil Health 11: Can the Abundance or Activity of Soil Macrofauna be used to Indicate the Biological Health of Soils? 12: Biodiversity of Soil Organisms as an Indicator of Soil Health 13: Biomonitoring of Soil Health by Plants 14: Bioindicators to Detect Contamination of Soils with Special Reference to Heavy Metals 15: Chemical and Molecular Approaches for Rapid Assessment of the Biological Status of Soils 16: Use of Genetically Modified Biosensors for Soil Ecotoxicity Testing 17: Biological Indicators of Soil Health: Synthesis

    £133.06

  • Asian Rice Bowls The Returning Crisis

    CABI Publishing Asian Rice Bowls The Returning Crisis

    Book SynopsisLess than two decades ago, the world was focusing on the impending food crisis across Asia, which was given little hope of ever being able to meet its rapidly growing food demand. Since then, Asia has made a quantum leap in food production. Technological innovations and policies that promoted intensive rice production systems helped achieve this. The authors of this book argue that there is a growing sense of complacency about future food supplies in Asia and that such complacency is not warranted. While rice productivity may increase, this will be limited by a number of factors: withdrawal of land and labor from agriculture to other uses, increased competition for resources, and land degradation. It is unlikely to match the increase in demand for rice because of population growth. The book provides a thorough assessment of the opportunities for increasing land productivity, including crop diversification. It evaluates the successes and limitations of the Green Revolution for rice in ATable of Contents1: Introduction - The State of Rice in Post-Green Revolution in Asia 2: Rice Productivity Growth: The Case Against Complacency 3: Sustaining Farm Profits Through Technical Change 4: Intensification-Induced Degradation of the Paddy Resource Base 5: Erosion, Pollution and Poison: Externalities and Rice 6: Asian Rice Market: A Demand and Supply Prospects 7: GATT and Rice: Impact on the Rice Market and Implications for Research Priorities 8: Agricultural Commercialization and Farmer Product Choices - The Case of Diversification Out of Rice 9: Strategic Look at Factor Markets and the Organization of Agricultural Production Beyond 2025 10: Post-Green Revolution Seed Technology for Intensive Rice Systems 11: Fertilizers and Pesticides: Higher Levels versus Improved Efficiencies 12: Dealing with Labor Scarcity - Mechanical Technologies 13: References

    £79.42

  • CABI Publishing Sustainability of Rice Farming

    Book SynopsisRice has supported a greater number of people for a longer period of time than any other crop. Nearly half of the global population is dependent on rice as its major staple food. While Asia remains the main centre of production and consumption of rice, the importance of rice is increasing rapidly in Africa and Latin America, and exports of rice from the United States and Australia are of major importance to the world rice trade. This book explores the factors which have contributed to the sustainability of rice production over the eight or nine thousand years for which rice has been produced. Sustainability is defined as the maintenance or improvement of production levels and protection of natural resources, within the context of economic viability and social acceptability. The author covers a wide range of issues, including soil fertility, plant breeding, pest management, irrigation, land degradation and social and economic factors. Greatest emphasis is placed on the special features Table of Contents1: The Importance of the Sustainability of Rice Farming 2: The Origins and History of Rice Farming 3: Rice Farming Today 4: The Biophysical Basis of the Sustainability of Rice Farming 5: Maintaining the Nutrient Requirements of Rice 6: Maintaining Water Supplies for Rice 7: Social and Economic Factors and the Sustainability of Rice Farming 8: Concerns About the Sustainability of Rice Farming 9: Increasing and Sustaining Rice Production

    £89.37

  • Crop Residues in Sustainable Mixed CropsLivestock

    CABI Publishing Crop Residues in Sustainable Mixed CropsLivestock

    Book SynopsisIn many tropical areas the main constraint to increased output of livestock products is the inability of producers to feed animals adequately throughout the year. Yet opportunities exist to enhance ruminant livestock feed supplies by using crop residues, such as cereal straw and legume haulms. Greater emphasis is therefore now being placed on vegetative production in plant breeding research. Crop residues also play an important role in conserving soil moisture, preventing erosion and providing products such as fuel or thatch for smallholders. This book provides a multi-disciplinary perspective on crop residues, bringing together crop, animal and social scientists from six continents. It has been developed from papers presented at a workshop held in April 1996 at ICRISAT Asia Center, as part of the Systemwide Livestock Program of the Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research (CGIAR) convened by the International Livestock Research Institute (ILRI), based in Africa. It wiTable of Contents1: Technological Constraints and Opportunities in Relation to Class of Livestock and Production Objectives, 2: The Influence of Socioeconomic Factors on the Availability and Utilization of Crop Residues as Animal Feeds, 3: Crop Residues in Tropical Africa: Trends in Supply, Demand and Use, 4: Cowpea and Its Improvement: Key to Sustainable Mixed Crop/Livestock Farming Systems in West Africa, 5: Dynamics of Feed Resources in Mixed Farming Systems in Southeast Asia, 6: Dynamics of Feed Resources in Mixed Farming Systems of South Asia, 7: Dynamics of Feed Resources in Mixed Farming Systems of West/Central Asia-North Africa, 8: Dynamics of Feed Resources in Mixed Farming Systems of Latin America, 9: Crop Residues as a Strategic Resource in Mixed Farming Systems, 10: Alternatives to Crop Residues as Feed Resources in Mixed Farming Systems, 11: Alternatives to Crop Residues for Soil Amendment, 12: Crop Residues for Feeding Animals in Asia: Technology Development and Adoption in Crop/Livestock Systems, 13: The National Perspective: A Synthesis of Country Reports Presented at the Workshop,

    £116.68

  • Thrips as Crop Pests

    CABI Publishing Thrips as Crop Pests

    Book SynopsisThrips have recently surged to prominence as insect pests of field, plantation and glasshouse crops in many countries, associated with increased international trade in fresh vegetables, fruit, flowers and plant propagation material. They can cause direct feeding damage to the aerial parts of plants, resulting in yield loss and spoilage, and some are vectors of destructive plant viruses. Their minute size and secretive habits make them particularly difficult to detect and control. This book, containing contributions from several world authorities from Europe, the USA and Asia, is the most comprehensive treatise on thrips as crop pests ever to be published. It brings together a vast amount of modern work set against a wealth of background knowledge, covering basic biology, ecology, applied science and pest control. The result is a book indispensable for agricultural advisers and growers concerned with thrips pests, and a unique reference source and stimulus for research entomologists stuTable of Contentsi: Contributors ii: Preface iii: Acknowledgements 1: Pest thrips in perspective T Lewis 2: Structure, growth and development G Moritz 3: Host selection, communication and reproductive behaviour L I Terry 4: Feeding W D J Kirk 5: Flight and dispersal T Lewis 6: Biological diversity L A Mound 7: Distribution, abundance and population dynamics W D J Kirk 8: Predation by insects and mites M W Sabelis and P C J Van Rijn 9: Interaction with hymenopterous parasitoids and parasitic nematodes A J M Loomans, T Murai and I D Greene 10: Fungal pathogens of thrips T M Butt and M Brownbridge 11: Field and laboratory techniques T Lewis 12: Culturing thrips and parasitoids A J M Loomans and T Murai 13: Feeding and oviposition injuries to plants C C Childers 14: Thrips as vectors of plant pathogens D E Ullman, J S Sherwood and T L German 15: Chemical control T Lewis 16: Integrated Pest Management (IPM) of field crops M P Parrella and T Lewis 17: Integrated Pest Management (IPM) in tree crops B L Parker and M Skinner 18: Integrated Pest Management (IPM) in glasshouses R J Jacobson iv: Appendix 1: Thrips species cited with authorities and common names v: Appendix 2: Major crops infested by thrips with main symptoms and predominant injurious species vi: Appendix 3: Tree crops, associated thrips and components of control vii: Index

    £169.78

  • Forage Seed Production Volume 1

    CABI Publishing Forage Seed Production Volume 1

    Book SynopsisThe grasses and legumes grown in pastures and rangelands form the basis of the worldwide animal production industry. Some species also have a significant role in the sport and leisure industry, for playing surfaces such as golf courses and football fields. It is therefore vitally important to ensure that seed supplies of appropriate species are available for use on a commercial scale. This book is published in association with the International Herbage Seed Production Research Group. It brings together leading researchers and along with its companion volume Forage Seed Production Volume 2: Tropical and Subtropical Species (to be published in late 1998), provides the definitive resource for all those concerned with breeding and profitable seed production for grasses and legumes used within grazing systems or recreation and amenity provision. The book is in two parts. Part 1 covers all aspects relevant to seed production, including improving seed yield and quality, crop management, harveTable of Contents1: General introduction, D T Fairey and J G Hampton 2: Establishing potential seed yield in grasses and legumes, T S Aamlid, O M Heide, B R Christie and R L McGraw 3: Components of yield in grasses and legumes, J G Hampton and D T Fairey 4: Maturation of grass and legume seed, P Coolbear, M J Hill, and W Pe 5: Grass seed crop management, M P Rolston, J S Rowarth, W C Young III, and G W Mueller-Warrant 6: Legume seed crop management, A H Marshall, J J Steiner, O Niemelainen, and J Hacquet 7: Pollination and fertilization in grasses and legumes, D T Fairey, P T P Clifford, and S M Griffith 8: Harvesting and processing grass and legume seed, U Simon, P T P Clifford, M Hare, and B Kjaersgaard 9: Seed quality of grasses and legumes, M J Hill, J G Hampton, and K A Hill 10: Breeding for higher seed yields in grasses and forage legumes, A Elgersma and A J P van Wijk 11: The Forage Seed Trade, A Burgon, O B Bondesen, W H Verburgt, A G Hall, N S Bark, M Robinson, and G Timm 12: Case Histories: 12.1: Festuca arundinacea Schreb. (tall fescue) in the USA: a case history, W C Young III 12.2: Festuca rubra L. (creeping red fescue) in Canada: a case history, N A Fairey 12.3: Lolium multiflorum Lam. (italian ryegrass) in Germany: a case history, W Schoberlein and E L Entrup 12.4: Lolium perenne L. (perennial ryegrass) in Denmark: a case history, Kh Svensson and B Boelt 12.5: Poa pratensis L. (kentucky bluegrass/smooth stalked meadow grass) in The Netherlands: a case history, D Donner and G Borm 12.6: Dactylis glomerata L. (cocksfoot/orchardgrass) in New Zealand: a case history, M J Hill 12.7: Lotus corniculatus L. (birdsfoot trefoil) in North America: a case history, P R Beuselinck 12.8: Medicago spp. (lucerne/alfalfa) in Canada: a case history, D T Fairey and N A Fairey 12.9: Trifolium pratense L. (red clover) in France: a case history, S Bouet and G Sicard 12.10: Trifolium repens L. (white clover) in New Zealand: a case history, P T P Clifford 12.11: Trifolium subterraneum L. (subterranean clover) in Australia: a case history, K G Boyce

    £128.07

  • Temperate Forage Legumes

    CABI Publishing Temperate Forage Legumes

    Book SynopsisThe major temperate forage legumes are of global importance in the sustainable productivity of ruminant feed in the developed world. This book brings together in one volume all aspects of their basic biology and associated production practices. Emphasis is placed on the importance of understanding plant characteristics and their consequences in terms of forage output, quality and utilization by livestock. Recent research advances are reviewed and put into context and several recently commercialised species are also covered. The introduction considers the history, current extent, benefits and limits of temperate forage legume usage. Subsequent chapters are dedicated to a comprehensive examination of each forage species in turn, dealing with their origin, morphology, physiology, ecology, nitrogen-fixing capability, cultivars, seed production, nutritive value and productivity. The key factors for optimal management are identified and the prospects for the future outlined, including the poTable of Contents1: Introduction 2: White Clover 3: Lucerne 4: Red Clover 5: Subterranean Clover 6: Birdsfoot Trefoil and Greater Lotus 7: Alsike Clover and Sainfoin 8: Serrandellas, Sulla and Tagasaste 9: Prospects for Forage Legumes i: Index

    £50.87

  • Grassland Dynamics

    CABI Publishing Grassland Dynamics

    Book SynopsisThe development of computer simulation models is an important growth area in both pure and applied ecology. The opportunity that mathematical models provide to integrate the components of an ecosystem, results in the ability to make quantitative predictions about the future behaviour of that system, or of elements within it. This means that they are powerful tools with wide applications and enormous potential for increasing our understanding of natural systems and our ability to use them in a sustainable way. This book is, almost uniquely, a complete account of one such model, the Hurley Pasture Model, a dynamic, deterministic, mechanistic simulation model for grassland, which has been developed by the author over some twenty years, in collaboration with scientists at several centres. Firstly, the rationale and theoretical elements of this type of model are described. An overview of the Hurley grassland simulator and the derivation and construction of its plant, animal, soil and litterTable of Contents1: Dynamic Models 2: Overview of the Pasture Model 3: Plant Submodel 4: Animal Submodel 5: Soil and Litter Submodel 6: Water Submodel 7: Environment and Management 8: Dynamic Simulations 9: Steady-state Simulations 10: The ACSL Program 11: Index

    £106.20

  • Plant Breeding and WholeSystem Crop Physiology

    CABI Publishing Plant Breeding and WholeSystem Crop Physiology

    Book SynopsisImprovements in adaptation and maturity leading to greater yield are the most important criteria for the acceptance of a new crop cultivar, since it is the yield which dictates the economic value of the crop. Therefore, yield improvement is one goal of virtually every crop breeding program. Many such programs have tended to concentrate on identifying the genetic traits responsible for higher yield and selecting each of them in the later stages of the breeding cycle. However, selection for yield per se is still the most effective method, since it is a combination of traits, operating within the limits of the system, which finally determines yield. This book presents a whole-system, or holistic viewpoint for the improvement of adaptation, maturity and yield. Central to its thesis is recognition that system-established changes in levels of the components of the plant system, within a constant capacity, i.e. within the limitations of the system, determines yield and other cultivar characteTable of Contents1: Shifts from Current Paradigms Suggested by Near-whole and Whole-system Research 2: The Beginning of Systems Thinking about Breeding for Yield 3: Biomass Accumulation: The First Major Physiological Genetic Component of Yield 4: Partitioning of Photosynthate: The Second Major Physiological Genetic Component of Yield 5: Days to Maturity: The Third Major Physiological Genetic Component of Yield 6: A Model of Photoperiod x Temperature Interaction Effects on Plant Development 7: Prediction of Phenology by the Genotype x Photoperiod x Temperature Interaction Model 8: Interactive Control over Plant Development by Vernalization, Photoperiodism and Temperature 9: Yield System Analysis: An Adjunct to Yield Trials 10: Interplant Competition and Breeding for Higher Yield 11: System-established Interconnections among Plant Traits and Implications for Plant Breeding Strategies 12: Maximising Efficiency of Breeding for Higher Crop Yield 13: Systems Thinking Requires Multidisciplinary Expertise and Collaboration

    £133.06

  • Potato Cyst Nematodes

    CABI Publishing Potato Cyst Nematodes

    Book SynopsisThe two closely related species of Potato Cyst-Nematodes (PCN), Globodera rostochiensis (Woll) and Globodera pallida Stone have a worldwide distribution. Both are internationally recognized plant quarantine organisms of actual or potential major economic importance wherever potatoes are grown or traded. They occur in large soil masses and also adhere to potato tubers as microscopic cysts, which represent a complex of morphologically identical, but behaviourally different virulence groups, or pathotypes. This presents major problems for their detection, identification and management. This book is a synthesis of current practical knowledge and underpinning scientific research on PCN globally. It is arranged in five sections, comprising nineteen chapters by leading practitioners and research nematologists, in which the biology, detection, identification and control options (including plant resistance) for PCN are examined. In addition, its worldwide status is considered, including South ATable of Contents1: Introduction: Potato Cyst Nematode – An International Pest Complex 2: Potato Cyst Nematode 3: The Origins, Global Distribution & Biology of Potato Cyst Nematodes (Globodera rostochiensis) & Globodera pallida Stone), S Turner, The Queen’s University of Belfast & K Evans, IACR, Rothamsted Experimental Station 4: The Physiology and Sensory Perception of Potato Cyst Nematodes, Globodera Species R N Perry, IACR, Rothamsted Experimental Station, Harpenden, UK 5: Potato Cyst Nematodes: Species, Pathotypes and Virulence Concepts, C C Fleming, The Queen’s University of Belfast, Northern Ireland, UK and T O Powers, University of Nebraska, USA 6: Detection and Identification of PCN 7: The Principles and Practice of Sampling for the Detection of Potato Cyst Nematodes, P P J Haydock, Harper Adams, UK and R N Perry, IACR, Rothamsted Experimental Station, UK 8: Sample Preparation, Soil Extraction and Laboratory Facilities for the Detection of Potato Cyst Nematodes, S J Turner 9: Potato Cyst Nematode Diagnostics: Morphology, Differential Hosts and Biochemical Techniques, C C Fleming and T O Powers 10: Control Options for PCN 11: Potato Cyst Nematodes: Damage Mechanisms & Tolerance in the Potato, D Trudgill, Scottish Crop Research Institute, K Evans, IACR, Rothamsted Experimental Station, and M Phillips, Scottish Crop Research Institute 12: Management and Regulatory Control Strategies for Potato Cysts Nematodes (Globodera rostochiensis and G. pallida) A G Whitehead, Harpenden, UK and S J Turner 13: Population Modelling and Integrated Control Options for Potato Cyst Nematodes, M S Phillips and D L Trudgill 14: PCN Resistance 15: Breeding for Resistance to the Potato Cyst Nematodes G. rostochiensis & G. pallida: Strategies, Mechanisms & Genetic Resources, M Dale, SCRI & M De Scurrah, Centro Internacional de la Papa 16: The Evaluation and Durability of Potato Cyst Nematode Resistance in the Potato, C C Fleming 17: Engineering Resistance in the Potato to Potato Cyst Nematodes, H J Atkinson, C J Lilley, P E Urwin and M J McPherson, University of Leeds, Leeds, UK 18: Worldwide Status of PCN 19: Potato Cyst Nematodes (Globodera spp.) in South America, J Franco, R Oros, N Ortuño, PROINDA, Cochabamba, Bolivia and G Main, University of Leeds, Leeds, UK 20: Potato Cyst Nematodes (Globodera spp.) in Western Europe, H Van Riel, Plantenziektenkkundig Dienst, Wageningen, & A Mülder, Hilbrand Laboratory for Soil-borne Pests and Diseases, The Netherlands 21: Potato Cyst Nematodes (Globodera spp.) in Central Europe, the Balkans and Baltic states, R J Marks and E Rojanvcovski, Research Institute for Plant Protection, Bucharest, Romania 22: Potato Cyst Nematodes (Globodera spp.) in Central and North America, B B Brodie 23: Potato Cyst Nematodes (Globodera spp.) in Asia, K Zaheer, Department of Biological Sciences, Islamabad, Pakistan 24: Potato Cyst Nematodes (Globodera spp.) in Africa, K P N Kleynhans, Plant Protection Research Institute, Pretoria, Republic of South Africa 25: Potato Cyst Nematodes (Globodera spp.) in New Zealand and Australia , J N Marshall, New Zealand Institute for Crop & Food Research, Christchurch, New Zealand

    £133.06

  • Smallholder Cash Crop Production Under Market

    CABI Publishing Smallholder Cash Crop Production Under Market

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisPro poor' economic growth is widely recognised as an important means for reducing poverty in developing countries. With the majority of the world's poor living in rural areas, agricultural intensification, with higher land and labour productivity from increased integration in input and output markets, is one way to expand income and livelihood opportunities for rural people. This book uses a new institutional economics perspective to review the effects of market liberalisation on service provision to smallholder farmers. In many parts of the world, particularly in Sub-saharan Africa, the private sector has failed to fill the gaps left by the collapse of state supported input and credit supply systems. Using case studies from Ghana, Tanzania and Pakistan, the book investigates the difficulties facing the private sector in supplying inputs and credit and the conditions required for sustainable private sector investment to the benefit of rural people. The analysis has important lessons foTable of Contents1: A New Institutional Economics Perspective on Current Policy Debates, C Poulton, A Dorward, J Kydd, N Poole and L Smith 2: Cotton Production and Marketing in Northern Ghana: The Dynamics of Competition on a System Interlocking Transactions, C Poulton 3: The Cashew Sector in Southern Tanzania: Overcoming Problems of Input Supply, C Poulton 4: Cotton and Wheat Marketing and the Provision of Pre-harvest Services in Sindh Province, Pakistan, M Stockbridge, L Smith and H Ram Lohano 5: Conclusions: New Institutional Economics, Policy Debates and the Research Agenda, A Dorward, J Kydd and C Poulton

    1 in stock

    £84.87

  • Lettuce Endive and Chicory

    CABI Publishing Lettuce Endive and Chicory

    Book SynopsisIn common with other titles in this series, this volume describes the scientific principles that are the bases of crop production practices. This volume focuses on the leafy salad vegetables lettuce, endive and chicory. It opens with a review of world production data, crop uses, botany, taxonomy and evolution. It then describes the genetics and breeding of the crop, including cultivar development and germplasm resources. Physiological aspects, such as germination, growth and development, are then discussed. Production methods worldwide, including growing under cover in protected environments, are reviewed, before consideration of harvesting and seeds, pests and diseases, and economics and marketing. The book is written by one of the world's leading authorities on the subject and will be indispensable for advanced students and growers in horticulture.Table of Contents1: Introduction to the Crops 2: Genetics and Breeding 3: Physiology of Germination, Growth and Development 4: Production Methods 5: Harvest and Postharvest Methods 6: Seed Production and Marketing 7: Diseases and their Control 8: Insects, Weeds and Other Pests and their Control 9: Marketing, Economics and Food Safety

    £49.26

  • Grass for Dairy Cattle

    CABI Publishing Grass for Dairy Cattle

    Book SynopsisWith the current interest in the environmental and economic sustainability of dairy farming, grass forage crops have emerged as a potential solution to some of the nutrient management problems now encountered on intensively managed dairy farms. The expansion and reintegration of grass-based systems into the mainstream of dairying systems will require a major paradigm shift involving economic, social and ecological, as well as biological factors. This book examines the role of grass in milk production in sustainable agricultural ecosystems. It provides a current summary of the role of grass in dairy cattle systems, including the breeding, management, storage, feeding and economics of grass for both lactating and dry dairy cows. Written by leading specialists from Australia, Europe, New Zealand, North and South America, this is an essential reference source for researchers, dairy industry professionals and advanced students of forage and dairy cattle nutrition.Table of Contents1: The Future of Grass for Dairy Cattle, G W Fick, Cornell University, USA and E A Clark, University of Guelph, Canada 2: Breeding Cool-Season Grasses, M D Casler, University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA 3: Breeding Tropical and Subtropical Grasses, J B Hacker, CSIRO Tropical Agriculture, Australia and L Jank, CNGGC/EMBRAPA, Brazil 4: Sward Characteristics and Management Effects on Cool-Season Grass Forage Quality, C C Sheaffer, P Seguin, University of Minnesota, USA and G J Cuomo, West Central Experiment Station, USA 5: Tropical and Subtropical Grass Management and Quality, R T Cowan, University of Queensland, Australia and K F Lowe, Australian Tropical Dairy Institute, Australia 6: Potassium Management, J H Cherney, D J R Cherney, Cornell University, USA and T W Bruulsema, Potash and Phosphate Institute, Canada 7: Nitrogen Management and Sustainability, S C Jarvis, Institute of Grassland and Environmental Research, UK 8: Phosphorus Management and Sustainability, B W Mathews, University of Hawaii at Hilo, USA, J P Tritschler II, Applied Epidemiology Inc., USA and S Miyasaka, University of Hawaii at Manoa, USA 9: Grass Silage, P O'Kiely, Teagasc, Grange Research Centre, Ireland and R E Muck, USDA-Agriculture Research Service, USA 10: Grass Baleage, C Ohlsson, Danish Institute of Agricultural Science, Denmark 11: Principles of Grass Growth and Pasture Utilization, A J Parsons, AgResearch, Grasslands Research Centre, New Zealand and D F Chapman, University of Melbourne, Australia 12: Grazing Management Systems for Dairy Cattle, D A Clark, Dairying Research Corporation Ltd., New Zealand and V R Kanneganti, USDA-Agricultural Research Service, USA 13: Supplementation of Cool-Season Grass Pastures for Dairy Cattle, L D Muller and S L Fales, The Pennsylvania State University, USA 14: Modelling Grass Utilization by Dairy Cattle, D J R Cherney, Cornell University, USA and D R Mertens, USDA-Agricultural Research Service, USA 15: Economics of Grass for Dairy Cattle, K C Moore, University of Missouri, USA

    £128.07

  • Fire Blight

    CABI Publishing Fire Blight

    Book SynopsisFire blight is a major disease of apples, pears and certain woody ornamental plants. It is caused by the bacterium Erwinia amylovora. This organism was one of the first plant pathogenic bacteria to be extensively investigated, and has become a model for study by bacteriologists in the development of their subject. Written by leading research workers from the USA, Europe and New Zealand, this book is the first comprehensive volume for twenty years to address this subject.Table of Contents1: What is Fire Blight? Who is Erwinia amylovora? How to Control It? Joël L Vanneste, HortResearch, New Zealand Part I: The Disease 2: Epidemiology of Fire Blight, 3: Distribution and Economic Importance of Fire Blight, 4: Genetic Diversity and Host Range of Erwinia amylovora, 5: Migration of Erwinia amylovora in Host Plant Tissues, Part II: The Pathogen 6: Erwinia amylovora: General Characteristics, Biochemistry and Serology, 7: Exopolysaccharides of Erwinia amylovora: Structure, Biosynthesis, Regulation, Role in Pathogenicity of Amylovoran and Levan, 8: hrp Genes and Harpins of Erwinia amylovora: a Decade of Discovery, 9: Disease-specific Genes of Erwinia amylovora: Keys to Understanding Pathogenesis and Potential Targets for Disease Control, 10: Iron and Fire Blight: Role in Pathogenicity of Desferrioxamine E, the Main Siderophore of Erwinia amylovora, Part III: Control of Fire Blight 11: Chemical Control of Fire Blight, 12: The Development of Streptomycin-resistant Strains of Erwinia amylovora, 13: Breeding for Resistance to Fire Blight, 14: Transgenic Varieties and Rootstocks Resistant to Fire Blight, 15: Fire Blight Risk Assessment Systems and Models, 16: Biological Control of Fire Blight, 17: Integrated Orchard and Nursery Management for the Control of Fire Blight,

    £125.68

  • Diseases of Tropical Fruit Crops

    CABI Publishing Diseases of Tropical Fruit Crops

    Book SynopsisComprehensive information on diseases of the most important tropical fruit cropsChapters are devoted to a single or, in some cases, a related group of host plantsThe history, distribution, importance, symptoms, aetiology, epidemiology and management of diseases of each crop are described in detailThis book offers a comprehensive review of diseases of important tropical and some subtropical fruit crops. The history, distribution, importance, etiology, epidemiology and control of diseases of each host crop are covered, along with brief summaries on the taxonomy, origins and characteristics of each host. Additional information is given on the biology and pathology of the causal agents and on new advances that change or otherwise enhance our understanding of the nature and cause of these diseases. Plant pathologists, plantation and nursery managers, lecturers and those who are involved in tropical agriculture and horticulture will find this an essential reference.Table of Contents1: Common pathogens of tropical fruit crops, R C Ploetz, T-K Lim, AFFA, Australia and J A Menge, University of California, USA 2: Diseases of atemoya, cherimoya, soursop, sugar apple and related crops, R C Ploetz 3: Diseases of avocado, J A Menge, University of California, USA and R C Ploetz 4: Diseases of banana and plantain, R C Ploetz, J E Thomas, Queensland Horticulture Institute, Australia and W Slabaugh, Agraquest Inc., Idaho, USA 5: Diseases of breadfruit, jackfruit and related crops, S Sangchote, Kasetsart University, Bangkok, Thailand, J G Wright, Secretariat of the Pacific Community, Suva, Fiji and G I Johnson, ACIAR, Canberra, Australia 6: Diseases of carambola, S Muid, Universiti Malaysia, Sarawak, Malaysia, R C Ploetz and A W Cooke, Queensland Horticulture Institute, Australia 7: Diseases of citrus, L W Timmer, S M Garnsey, University of Florida, USA and P Broadbent, Elizabeth Macarthur Agricultural Institute, Australia 8: Diseases of coconut, N A Harrison, University of Florida, USA and P Jones, Rothamsted Experimental Station, Harpenden, UK 9: Diseases of date, R C Ploetz, H Ohr, University of California, USA, J Carpenter, USDA Date and Citrus Experiment Station, California, USA and Y Pinkas, ARO, The Volcani Center, Israel 10: Diseases of durian, T-K Lim, AFFA, Australia and S Sanchote, Kasetsart University, Bangkok, Thailand 11: Diseases of fig, T J Michailides, University of California, USA 12: Diseases of guava, T-K Lim, AFFA, Australia, and B Manicom, Institute of Tropical and Subtropical Crops, South Africa 13: Diseases of kiwifruit, B Latorre, Pontificia Universidad, Chile and H Pak, Horticulture and Food Research Institute of New Zealand, Auckland, New Zealand 14: Diseases of lychee, longan and rambutan, L M Coates, Queensland Horticulture Institute, Australia, S Sangchote, Kasetsart University, Bangkok, Thailand, G I Johnson, ACIAR, Canberra, Australia and C Sittigul, Chiang Mai University, Thailand 15: Diseases of mango, R C Ploetz 16: Diseases of mangosteen, T-K Lim, AFFA, Australia and S Sanchote, Kasetsart University, Bangkok, Thailand 17: Diseases of papaya, D Persley, Queensland Department of Primary Industries, Australia and R C Ploetz 18: Diseases of passion fruit, A de Goes, Campus Jaboticabal, Brazil, B Manicom, Institute of Tropical and Subtropical Crops, South Africa, R C Ploetz and C Ruggiero, Campus Jaboticabal, Brazil 19: Diseases of pineapple, K G Rohrbach and D Schmitt, University of Hawaii, USA 20: Future outlook, R C Ploetz and L W Timmer, University of Florida, USA Addendum I: Microbe authorities and synonyms Addendum II: Plant common names, taxa and authorities Addendum III: Insect and acarid common names and authorities 21: Index

    £153.18

  • Broadening the Genetic Base of Crop Production

    CABI Publishing Broadening the Genetic Base of Crop Production

    Book SynopsisThis book focuses on the previously neglected interface between the conservation of plant genetic resources and their utilization. Only through utilization can the potential value of conserved genetic resources be realised. However, as this book shows, much conserved germplasm has to be subjected to long-term pre-breeding and genetic enhancement before it can be used in plant breeding programmes.The authors explore the rationale and approaches for such pre-breeding efforts as the basis for broadening the genetic bases of crop production. Examples from a range of major food crops are presented and issues analysed by leading authorities from around the world.Table of Contentsa: Foreword, M Duwayri and G Hawtin b: Preface, D Cooper, C Spillane and T Hodgkin PART ONE: GENERAL PRINCIPLES 1: Broadening the genetic base of crops: an overview, D Cooper, T Hodgkin and C Spillane 2: Evolutionary and genetic perspectives on the dynamics of crop genepools, C Spillane and P Gepts 3: Base broadening: introgression and incorporation, B Spoor and N Simmonds 4: The role of local level gene flow in enhancing and maintained genetic diversity, J Berthaud et al. 5: Regulatory aspects of breeding for diversity, N Louwaars 6: Decentralized and participatory plant breeding for marginal environments, S Ceccarelli et al. 7: Empowering farmers and broadening the genetic base: agricultural research and resource management, R Salazar PART TWO: CROP CASE STUDIES 8: The state of millet diversity and its use in West Africa, O Niangado 9: State of the use of maize genetic diversity in the USA and sub-Saharan Africa, S P Tallury and M M Goodman 10: The state of use of potato genetic diversity, R Ortiz 11: The state of use of cassava genetic diversity and a proposal to enhance it, G Second and C Iglesias 12: State of use of Musa diversity, S Sharrock and E Frison PART THREE: POPULATION MANAGEMENT 13: Dynamic management of genetic resources: a 13 year experiment on wheat, I Goldringer et al. 14: Genetic base broadening of barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) in the Nordic countries, M Vetelainen and E A J Nissila 15: Evolutionary changes in Cambridge Composite Cross Five of barley, K M Ibrahim and J A Barrett 16: Genetic base broadening in the West Indies Sugar Cane Breeding Program by the incorporation of wild species, A J Kennedy 17: Potential of genetic resources and breeding strategies for base broadening in Beta, L Frese, B Desprez, and D Ziegler 18: HOPE, a hierarchical, open-ended system for broadening the breeding base of maize, L Kannenberg 19: The germplasm enhancement of maize (GEM) project: Private and public sector collaboration, L Pollak and W Salhuana 20: A French cooperative program for management and utilization of maize genetic resources, A Gallais, J P Monod, and others PART FOUR: OTHER APPROACHES TO BROADENING THE GENETIC BASE OF CROPS 21: Broadening the genetic base of lentil in South Asia, W Erskine et al. 22: Genetic diversity of barley: use of locally adapted germplasm to enhance yield and yield stability of barley in dry areas, S Grando, R Von Bothmer, S Ceccarelli 23: Breeding Phaseolus for intercrop combinations in the Andean highlands, J P Baudoin, F Camarena and M Lobo 24: Improving potato resistance to disease under the Global Initiative on Late Blight, T Bodo, R Trognitz, M Bonierbale, J A Landeo, G Forbes, J E Bradshaw, G R Mackay, R Waugh, M A Huarte, and L Colon 25: A Mexican bean breeding program for comprehensive horizontal resistance to all locally important pests and diseases, R G Espinosa, R A Robinson, P R Vallejo, F C Gonzalez and F R Rosales 26: The impact of decentralized and participatory plant breeding on the genetic base of crops, J Witcombe 27: Base broadening for client-oriented impact, L Sperling et al.

    £131.26

  • Nitrogen Fixation in Tropical Cropping Systems

    CABI Publishing Nitrogen Fixation in Tropical Cropping Systems

    Book SynopsisNitrogen fixation by leguminous plants is especially important when farmers are trying to minimise fertilizer use for cost or environmental reasons. This second edition of the highly successful book, first published in 1991, contains thoroughly updated and revised material on the theory and practice of nitrogen fixation in tropical cropping systems.Table of Contents1: Tropical Environments: Climates, Soils and Cropping Systems 2: N2-fixing Organisms in the Tropics 3: The Process of Nitrogen Fixation 4: Assessment of the Role of Nitrogen Fixation 5: Cycling of Fixed N2 in Tropical Cropping Systems 6: Cereal Crops and Grasses: Free-living, Root Associated and Endophytic Nitrogen Fixing Bacteria 7: Cyanobacteria and Azolla as Green Manure for Wetland Rice 8: Grain Legumes for Food, Fodder and Soil Fertility 9: Legumes as Green Manures and Cover Crops 10: Forage Legumes in Pastures and Leys 11: Plantation Crops: Understorey Legumes and Shade Trees 12: Agroforestry: Nitrogen Fixing Trees in Integrated Agriculture 13: Environmental Constraints to Nitrogen Fixation 14: Approaches to Enhancing N2-fixation 15: Future Impacts of N2-fixation in Tropical Agriculture

    £131.26

  • Durian

    CABI Publishing Durian

    Book SynopsisDurian is extensively grown in tropical regions, the major producers being Indonesia, Thailand, Malaysia and the Philippines. The tree is also grown in northern Australia, some South American countries and in Africa. Although to many its smell is notoriously offensive, its taste can become a passion and it is one of the most popular fruits in South-East Asia. This book is the first comprehensive, scientific volume to be published in English on this king of tropical fruit. It provides information on the biology, propagation and use of the fruit, and descriptions of the scientific basis of production practices and orchard management, as well as post-harvest processing. It will be a unique resource for horticulture and botanical libraries and for students of tropical horticulture worldwide.Table of ContentsSection 1: The Plant and the Environment 1: History, area of origin, nomenclature and genetic diversity 2: Areas of production and economic importance 3: Morphology, genetics and cultivars 4: Physiology and ecology Section 2: Pre-Harvest Management 5: Propagation 6: Orchard establishment, training and pruning 7: Nutritional requirements and fertilisation 8: Irrigation requirements and techniques 9: Other production practices 10: Physiological disorders and non-pathogenic diseases 11: Pests and diseases Section 3: Post-Harvest Management, Costs and Marketing 12: Costs and returns of durian production 13: Post-harvest technology 14: Durian products 15: Marketing 16: To quote the great 19th century naturalist, A.R. Wallace:“To eat durian is a new sensation worth a voyage to the East to experience”.

    £76.50

  • Potatoes Postharvest

    CABI Publishing Potatoes Postharvest

    4 in stock

    Book SynopsisA wider understanding of potato postharvest practices is needed to improve working relations between growers, agronomists, pathologists and crop store managers. Providing a comprehensive examination of international potato production, this book identifies which storage systems suit particular climatic zones as well as considering interactions between crop microclimate, dehydration, crop cooling, condensation and disease development. Potatoes Postharvest will guide the reader through the activities following harvest from store loading, store management, and grading to packaging and dispatch.Table of Contents1: Physiology 2: Harvesting and store loading systems 3: Store climate 4: Disease control in store 5: Store design and structure 6: Store ventilation 7: Store refrigeration 8: Store environment control 9: Store management 10: Seed grading and preparation for planting 11: Packhouse and processing facilities 12: Quality assurance 13: Marketing and costs

    4 in stock

    £113.99

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