Achieving sustainable cultivation of ornamental plants
Contributions by Prof John Erwin, Dr Yoo Gyeong Park, Dr Young Hoon Park, Dr Abinaya Manivannan, Dr Prabhakaran Soundararajan, Prof Byoung Ryong Jeong, Prof Traud Winkelmann, Dr Philipp Braun, Dr Emmy Dhooghe, Dr Johan van Huylenbroeck, Dr G. R. Rout, Dr S. Mohan Jain, Prof Neil O. Anderson, Dr Bruno Trevenzoli Favero, Dr Josefine Nymark Hegelund, Dr Henrik Lütken, Dr Qiansheng Li, Dr Mengmeng Gu, Dr John Majsztrik, James S. Owen Jr., Prof John D. Lea-Cox, Dr James E. Faust, Prof Gary A. Chastagner, Dr Andrea R. Garfinkel Edited by Emeritus Professor Michael Reid
Publication date:
28 April 2020Length of book:
444 pagesPublisher
Burleigh Dodds Science PublishingDimensions:
229x152mm6x9"
ISBN-13: 9781786763280
Ornamental plants are plants grown for decorative purposes. They include cut flowers, bulbs, potted plants, shrubs and trees for gardening and landscape design. Like other crops, ornamentals face challenges such as biotic and abiotic stresses as well as the need to develop more sustainable, ‘climate-smart’ methods of cultivation. This collection reviews the rich range of research addressing these challenges.
Part 1 discusses advances in understanding plant physiology, genetic diversity and breeding techniques. Chapters cover recent research on how plants respond to abiotic stress, ways of exploiting genetic diversity to improve target traits, advances in both conventional and marker-assisted breeding techniques, as well as their use to produce abiotic stress-resistant varieties. Part 2 surveys advances in cultivation techniques in such areas as nutrition, irrigation, protected cultivation and integrated disease management.
"This long-awaited book is a must read for anyone interested in the science underpinning current and future practices in the cultivation and postharvest management of ornamentals… This informative book will certainly take its rightful place in the working collection of anyone interested in continuously expanding and deepening their existing knowledge on ornamentals."
Dr Lynn Hoffman, Stellenbosch University, South Africa