Resultados de búsqueda - "Chang’an"

  1. Pyramiding BPH genes in rice maintains resistance against the brown planthopper under climate change por Wang, Chih-Lu, Luo, Pei-Qi, Hu, Fang-Yu, Li, Yi, Sung, Chang-Lin, Kuang, Yun-Hung, Lin, Shau-Ching, Yang, Zhi-Wei, Li, Charng-Pei, Huang, Shou-Horng, Hechanova, Sherry Lou, Jena, Kshirod K., Hsieh, Chia-Hung, Chuang, Wen-Po

    Publicado 2024
    “…However, the response of pyramiding combinations to environmental changes remains unclear. To address this knowledge gap, we investigated three pyramiding rice lines (BPH2 + 32, BPH9 + 32, and BPH18 + 32) in the context of varying climate change conditions, ensuring sufficient N. lugens–rice interactions. …”
    Enlace del recurso
    Journal Article
  2. Mineral nutrients in plants under changing environments: A road to future food and nutrition security por Khan, M. Iqbal R., Nazir, Faroza, Maheshwari, Chirag, Chopra, Priyanka, Chhillar, Himanshu, Sreenivasulu, Nese

    Publicado 2023
    “…This review particularly highlights interventions on (i) the physiological and molecular responses of mineral nutrients in crop plants under stressful environments; (ii) the deployment of breeding and biotechnological strategies for the optimization of nutrient acquisition, their transport, and distribution in plants under changing environments. Furthermore, the present review also infers the recent advancements in breeding and biotechnology‐based biofortification approaches for nutrient enhancement in crop plants to optimize yield and grain mineral concentrations under control and stress‐prone environments to address food and nutritional security.…”
    Enlace del recurso
    Journal Article
  3. Impact of land-use changes on soil properties and carbon pools in India: A meta-analysis por Padbhushan, Rajeev, Kumar, Upendra, Sharma, Sheetal, Rana, D.S., Kumar, Rajkishore, Kohli, Anshuman, Kumari, Priyanka, Parmar, Brajendra, Kaviraj, Megha, Sinha, Abhas Kumar, Annapurna, K., Gupta, Vadakattu V. S. R.

    Publicado 2022
    “…Land-use changes (LUC), primarily due to deforestation and soil disturbance, are one of the major causes of soil quality degradation and greenhouse gas emissions. …”
    Enlace del recurso
    Journal Article
  4. Simulating potential impacts of future climate change on post-rainy season sorghum yields in India por Chadalavada, Keerthi, Gummadi, Sridhar, Kundeti, Koteswara Rao, Kadiyala, Dakshina Murthy, Deevi, Kumara Charyulu, Dakhore, Kailas Kamaji, Bollipo Diana, Ranjitha Kumari, Thiruppathi, Senthil Kumar

    Publicado 2021
    “…The Crop Environment Resource Synthesis (CERES)-sorghum model was used to estimate the potential impacts of future climate change on post-rainy season sorghum yield values. …”
    Enlace del recurso
    Journal Article
  5. DNA methylation changes facilitated evolution of genes derived from Mutator-like transposable elements por Wang, Jun, Yu, Yeisoo, Tao, Feng, Zhang, Jianwei, Copetti, Dario, Kudrna, Dave, Talag, Jayson, Lee, Seunghee, Wing, Rod A., Fan, Chuanzhu

    Publicado 2016
    “…We explicitly show that methylation levels in the internal and terminated inverted repeat regions of these elements, which might be directed by the 24-nucleotide small RNA-mediated pathway, are different and change dynamically over evolutionary time. Lastly, we demonstrate that putative genes derived from Mutator-like transposable elements tend to be expressed in mature pollen, which have undergone de-methylation programming, thereby providing a permissive expression environment for newly formed/transposable element-derived genes. …”
    Enlace del recurso
    Journal Article
  6. G4: Assessment of the impact of anticipated external drivers of change on water resources of the coastal zone por Khan, Mohammed Zahir-ul Haque

    Publicado 2011
    “…These resources are largely shaped by tidal dynamics and upstream flows, and are affected by changes in the natural, socio-economic and institutional systems. …”
    Enlace del recurso
    Proposal
  7. Root-Induced Iron Oxidation, pH Changes and Zinc Solubilization in the Rhizosphere of Lowland Rice por Kirk, G.J.D., BAJITA, J.B.

    Publicado 1995
    “…The concentration of easily plant‐extractable Zn in the soil (measured by extraction in I M KCl) was negligible, and so it was necessary for the plants to induce changes in the soil to solubilize Zn. After 6 d, there was a substantial accumulation of Zn associated with organic matter and amorphous ferric hydroxide within 4–5 mm of the root plane. …”
    Enlace del recurso
    Journal Article

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