Photosynthetic Adaptability of Crops under Environmental Change
A special issue of Agronomy (ISSN 2073-4395). This special issue belongs to the section "Agroecology Innovation: Achieving System Resilience".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (30 April 2023) | Viewed by 13105
Special Issue Editors
Interests: plant physiology; eco-physiology; stress-physiology
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Interests: abiotic stress; photosynthesis; plants
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
There is no question that photosynthesis has always been and will be the basis of human existence. Currently, global climate change has been causing anomalies, meaning that adaptions have to occur faster than ever to face this change. Both photosynthetic microorganisms and plants are challenged by biotic and abiotic environmental conditions that require short-term acclimation and longer-term adaptations. The aim of the adapted forms and mechanisms realized at different levels of organization—gene, molecule, cell organelle, cell, tissue, organ, individual, and population—is to maintain photosynthetic efficiency. Any factor—water deficiency, drought, flooding, cold, heat, ozone, UV radiation, nutrient deficiency/excess, virus, etc.—that reduces the intensity of photosynthetic processes over a long or short period of time induces light stress, which can cause irreversible damage through potential free radicals. Facing rapidly changing and complex situations is a great challenge for both natural aquatic and terrestrial vegetation, as well as cultivated crops, and these processes can also mean the survival for the human race as well.
Papers submitted to this Special Issue should report novel, original research results and reviews focusing on the role of photosynthetic processes in the acclimation mechanisms to either single or combined environmental stresses, providing novel insights into the control mechanisms regulating plant productivity under unfavourable conditions. Multidisciplinary studies, including systems biology, molecular biology, genetic, physiological, and biochemical approaches are especially welcome.
Dr. Szilvia Veres
Prof. Dr. Tibor Janda
Guest Editors
Manuscript Submission Information
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Keywords
- climate change
- biotic stress
- abiotic stress
- plants
- photosynthetic organisms
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