Understanding and minimising fungicide resistance
Contributions by Dr Francisco J. Lopez-Ruiz, Professor Richard Oliver, Dr Laetitia Chartrain, Prof James K. M. Brown, Dr Frank van den Bosch, Dr Stephen Parnell, Dr Neil Paveley, Dr Michael Grimmer, Dr Nichola Hawkins, Prof Guido Schnabel, Dr Phillip M. Brannen, Dr Gregory M. Kemmitt, Dr Andreas Mehl, Dr Stefano F. F. Torriani, Dr Helge Sierotzki, Dr Wesley Mair, Dr Seiya Saito, Dr Chang-Lin Xiao, Dr Jean-Luc Genet Edited by Dr Francisco J. Lopez-Ruiz

Publication date:
26 September 2023Length of book:
420 pagesPublisher
Burleigh Dodds Science PublishingDimensions:
229x152mm6x9"
ISBN-13: 9781801461986
The emergence of fungicide resistance is a major challenge facing agriculture. With increasing regulation and costs limiting the development of new fungicides, farmers remain reliant on a relatively small group of working fungicides, many of which are decreasingly effective as major crop disease pathogens develop resistance to them.
Understanding and minimising fungicide resistance provides an authoritative review on the wealth of research on understanding the development of fungicide resistance in agricultural crops and the establishment of preventative measures which can be implemented to limit its spread and the consequent impact of disease on yields. This collection includes ways of understanding and preventing resistance to key groups of fungicides, such as SBI, Qol, SDHI and OSBPI.
“This new book provides a comprehensive coverage of the issue of fungicide resistance in agriculture. The content of the chapters in Part one is well supported by the inclusion of several case studies – written by representatives from the scientific community and the chemical industry – in Part two which detail recent advances in understanding resistance to key groups of fungicides. Edited by a leading name in the field and featuring contributions from a very impressive list of international experts, the volume promises to be an excellent reference for the future management of fungicide resistance.”(Lise Nistrup Jørgensen, Senior Scientist, Aarhus University, Denmark)