Plants use resources, i.e. carbon, nutrients, water and energy, either for growth or to defend themselves from biotic and abiotic stresses. This volume provides a timely understanding of resource allocation and its regulation in plants, linking the molecular with biochemical and physiological-level processes. Ecological scenarios covered include competitors, pathogens, herbivores, mycorrhizae, soil microorganisms, carbon dioxide/ozone regimes, nitrogen and light availabilities. The validity of the “Growth-Differentiation Balance Hypothesis” is examined and novel theoretical concepts and approaches to modelling plant resource allocation are discussed. The results presented can be applied in plant breeding and engineering, as well...
Plants are highly plastic in their potential to adapt to changing environmental conditions. For exam...
Plants are highly plastic in their potential to adapt to changing environmental conditions. For exam...
Three general questions are studied regarding plant carbon allocation strategies. (1) The R* Rule st...
Plants use resources, i.e. carbon, nutrients, water and energy, either for growth or to defend thems...
Plants use resources, i.e. carbon, nutrients, water and energy, either for growth or to defend thems...
Plants use resources, i.e. coarbon, nutrients, water and enery, either for growth or to defend thems...
Plants grow in dynamic environments where their fitness is determined by a multitude of biotic and a...
One of the goals of chemical ecology is to assess costs of plant defenses. Intraspecific trade-offs ...
Patterns and variations in concentration of carbon-based secondary compounds in plant tissues have b...
How plants respond to variation in the availability of abiotic resources is a central research topic...
<div><p>Plants are highly plastic in their potential to adapt to changing environmental conditions. ...
Plants compete with their neighbours for limiting resources such as light and nitrogen, which can pr...
Abstract Plants have evolved various adaptive strategies for balancing the benefits and costs of hav...
A hypothesis on regulation of the balance between growth and parasite defence in plants is formulate...
The problem of allocation of a plant's carbon resources is basically an evolutionary one in whi...
Plants are highly plastic in their potential to adapt to changing environmental conditions. For exam...
Plants are highly plastic in their potential to adapt to changing environmental conditions. For exam...
Three general questions are studied regarding plant carbon allocation strategies. (1) The R* Rule st...
Plants use resources, i.e. carbon, nutrients, water and energy, either for growth or to defend thems...
Plants use resources, i.e. carbon, nutrients, water and energy, either for growth or to defend thems...
Plants use resources, i.e. coarbon, nutrients, water and enery, either for growth or to defend thems...
Plants grow in dynamic environments where their fitness is determined by a multitude of biotic and a...
One of the goals of chemical ecology is to assess costs of plant defenses. Intraspecific trade-offs ...
Patterns and variations in concentration of carbon-based secondary compounds in plant tissues have b...
How plants respond to variation in the availability of abiotic resources is a central research topic...
<div><p>Plants are highly plastic in their potential to adapt to changing environmental conditions. ...
Plants compete with their neighbours for limiting resources such as light and nitrogen, which can pr...
Abstract Plants have evolved various adaptive strategies for balancing the benefits and costs of hav...
A hypothesis on regulation of the balance between growth and parasite defence in plants is formulate...
The problem of allocation of a plant's carbon resources is basically an evolutionary one in whi...
Plants are highly plastic in their potential to adapt to changing environmental conditions. For exam...
Plants are highly plastic in their potential to adapt to changing environmental conditions. For exam...
Three general questions are studied regarding plant carbon allocation strategies. (1) The R* Rule st...