Sustainable Plant Responses to Abiotic and Biotic Stresses
A special issue of Sustainability (ISSN 2071-1050).
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (30 September 2021) | Viewed by 5805
Special Issue Editors
Interests: plant pathology; fungal genetics and biology; epidemiology of plant pathogens; plant breeding and genetics; breeding for disease resistance microbial;
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Interests: plant secondary metabolite analysis; GABA (y-Aminobutyric acid) accumulation in tea plant; plant gene functional characterization; correlation anslysis between geographical origins and multi-elements spatial distribution in soil–tea plantation ecosystems; quality control of chemicals and biosafety evaluation in tea
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
This is a Special Issue invitation for collecting interesting papers that find proper solutions to plants in response to biotic and abiotic stress and that increase sustainable crop production. Abiotic stress, including environmental factors (temperature, water, humidity, light intensity, etc.), nutrient uptaking, and minor or heavy metals, will limit or be highly associated with plant growth and development. Plants responding to abiotic stress have been explored from many different angles, such as in their physiology, signal transduction, breeding and genetics, and, in particular, in gene characterization. Today, developing sustainable more agricultural practices or strategies to address abiotic stress is a growing demand in the scientific community. For biotic stress, plant and microbe interactions have been extensively studied at many different levels, for example, quantitative and qualitative resistance identification, plant–pathogen (R-Avr) pathosystems, new biocontrol manners to alternate the chemicals for controlling diseases and pests, high-capacity secretory systems between plants and pathogens, secondary metabolisms, fungi genetics and biology, epidemiology, gene editing to investigate the function of plant resistance or fungal pathogenicity genes, and population genetics. The recent progress within next generation sequencing provides the possibility to generate a large amount of “omics” data, which can improve our understanding of plant –(a)biotic stress interactions at genomic, transcriptomic, proteomic, and metabolomic levels. Every year, a huge amount of economical loss in crops are caused by biotic and abiotic stress, either directly or indirectly, worldwide.
Thus, it is of great importance to consider plant responses to biotic and abiotic stress in order to maintain sustainable agricultural production, and we encourage researchers from around the world to submit research articles, reviews, perspectives, and brief communications to this Special Issue. The Special Issue will consider, but not be limited to, the following topics, (1) plant responses to environmental factors (temperature, humidity, light, etc.), (2) the impact of nutrient deficiency and heavy metal contamination in plant growth and development, (3) plant and pathogen interactions, (4) biocontrol strategy in crop protection, (5) understanding fungal/bacterial/virus disease dynamics, and (6) novel research updated approaches of particular interest.
Dr. Zhongwei Zou
Prof. Dr. Xujun Zhu
Guest Editors
Manuscript Submission Information
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Keywords
- abiotic stress
- biotic stress
- temperature
- tolerance
- plant pathogen
- plant disease
- minor elements
- biocontrol
- phytobiomes
- secondary metabolites
- secretome
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