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OverviewEmerging and re-emerging viruses are a constant threat to plants. Despite intensive efforts to manage and prevent plant viruses and their potential vectors in crop production processes, many crops are damaged each year. This new book reviews the progress made to date and the challenges ahead in the field of plant viruses and agricultural production. It sheds light on previously undiscovered plant viruses, bringing together information on the detection and tracking, host interaction, evolution, and management. The first section covers the various hidden sources of plant viruses such as from wild plants, weeds, and tobacco as well as other undetermined plant virus sources. The second section covers the implications of mixed infection on disease pathogenicity and epidemiology, provides an understanding of the virus and host relationship, and presents an overview of plant viruses from old to new. Providing new and important knowledge on major plant viruses and discussing their nature as well as impact on plants, this volume will be of special interest to research scholars, professors, and scientists working on plant and environmental viruses. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Alireza Golnaraghi , Rajarshi Kumar GaurPublisher: Apple Academic Press Inc. Imprint: Apple Academic Press Inc. ISBN: 9781774916582ISBN 10: 1774916584 Pages: 366 Publication Date: 06 December 2024 Audience: College/higher education , Professional and scholarly , Tertiary & Higher Education , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Forthcoming Availability: Not yet available This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release. Table of ContentsPART 1: DIFFERENT SOURCES OF PLANT VIRUSES 1. Tracking of Plant Viruses in Different Sources: A Huge Gap Between Estimated and Known Diversity 2. Wild Plants, a Source of Emerging Viruses and Their Impact on Agriculture and Food Security 3. Tobacco and Weeds as Hidden Sources of Plant Viruses Threatening Vegetable Production of Solanaceae Crops 4. Diversity and Phylogeography of Begomoviruses and DNA Satellites Associated with Weed Hosts 5. Diversity of Arthropod Vectors of Plant Viruses 6. The Pomegranate Viruses and Their Pathogenic Expression 7. Virome and Vectorome Analyses of Vectors: New Approaches for Evolutionary Studies of Plant Viruses 8. Weeds and Wild Relatives as Undetermined Plant Virus Sources- Detection and Diagnosis PART 2: PLANT VIRUS-HOST INTERACTION/EVOLUTION 9. Implications of Mixed Infection on Disease Pathogenicity and Epidemiology 10. Understanding Begomovirus and Its Host Relationship 11. Plant Viruses: An Inquisitive Journey from Old to New WorldReviewsAuthor InformationAlireza Golnaraghi, PhD, is Assistant Professor in the Department of Plant Protection, Science and Research Branch, Islamic Azad University. He is also a researcher in the Department of Earth, Ocean and Atmospheric Sciences, University of British Columbia, and in the Department of Biodiversity, BoomZista Institute, both in Vancouver, Canada. Dr. Golnaraghi has made significant contributions on viruses and endophytic microbes, especially in wild plants in natural ecosystems. He has published over 50 national/international papers, authored several books, contributed in writing two book chapters, and presented more than 65 papers in national and international conferences. Rajarshi Kumar Gaur, PhD, is Professor of Biotechnology at Deen Dayal Upadhyaya Gorakhpur University, Uttar Pradesh, India. He handles many national and international grants and collaborative projects on plant viruses and disease management. He has made significant contributions on sugarcane viruses and published 130 national and international papers, authored 20 edited books, and presented many papers at national and international conferences. He has received several fellowships and awards and has visited several laboratories in the USA, Canada, New Zealand, UK, Thailand, Sweden, and Italy. He has received several fellowships. His PhD was on molecular characterization of sugarcane viruses, viz., mosaic, streak mosaic and yellow luteovirus. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |