the Control Of Diseases In Crops Is Still Largely Dominated By The Use Of Fungicides, But With The Increasing Incidence Of Fungicide Resistance, Plus Mounting Concern For The Environment Resulting From Excessive Agrochemical Use, The Search For Alternative, Reliable Methods Of Disease Control Is Gai
Induced Resistance for Plant Disease Control: Maximizing the Efficacy of Resistance Elicitors
โ Scribed by Walters, Dale; Walsh, David; Newton, Adrian; Lyon, Gary
- Book ID
- 111988077
- Publisher
- The American Phytopathological Society
- Year
- 2005
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 150 KB
- Volume
- 95
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0031-949X
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## Abstract Plants protect themselves from arthropod herbivores both directly, by expressing biochemical and morphological traits that interfere with herbivore development or behavior, and indirectly, by facilitating the action of natural enemies of herbivores. These direct and indirect resistance
the Control Of Diseases In Crops Is Still Largely Dominated By The Use Of Fungicides, But With The Increasing Incidence Of Fungicide Resistance, Plus Mounting Concern For The Environment Resulting From Excessive Agrochemical Use, The Search For Alternative, Reliable Methods Of Disease Control Is Gai