Seller
RRP: £44.99
Save £5.76 (13%)
Dispatched within 3-4 working days.
Evolutionary Dynamics of Plant-Pathogen Interactions
Synopsis
This volume sits at the cross-roads of a number of areas of scientific interest that, in the past, have largely kept themselves separate - agriculture, forestry, population genetics, ecology, conservation biology, genomics and the protection of plant genetic resources. Yet these areas also have a lot of common interests and increasingly these independent lines of inquiry are tending to coalesce into a more comprehensive view of the complexity of plant-pathogen associations and their ecological and evolutionary dynamics. This interdisciplinary source provides a comprehensive overview of this changing situation by identifying the role of pathogens in shaping plant populations, species and communities, tackling the issue of the increasing importance of invasive and newly emerging diseases and giving broader recognition to the fundamental importance of the influence of space and time (as manifest in the metapopulation concept) in driving epidemiological and co-evolutionary trajectories.
New & Used
Seller |
Information |
Condition |
Price |
|
| - | New | £39.23 + FREE UK P & P | |
What Reviewers Are Saying
'Burdon and Laine's book is an important contribution because of the variety of topics addressed, and their organization, which will be attractive to plant pathologists with an interest in both agricultural and wild systems ... I am confident it will be as stimulating to any pathologist interested in population biology as it has been to me.' Fernando Garcia-Arenal, The Quarterly Review of Biology '... a timely synthesis for any person that regularly works with plant pathogens (in agricultural or natural settings) and wants to learn more about the ecological and evolutionary aspects of plant-pathogen (fungi) interactions.' A. N. Schulz, Summer 2021 issue of Plant Science Bulletin