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Controlled Environment Horticulture [electronic resource] :Improving Quality of Vegetables and Medicinal Plants / by Christoph-Martin Geilfus.

By: Geilfus, Christoph-Martin [author.].
Contributor(s): SpringerLink (Online service).
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookPublisher: Cham : Springer International Publishing : Imprint: Springer, 2019Edition: 1st ed. 2019.Description: XV, 233 p. 41 illus., 36 illus. in color. online resource.Content type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9783030231972.Subject(s): Plant biotechnology | Plant physiology | Urban ecology (Biology) | Sustainability | Plant Biotechnology | Plant Physiology | Urban Ecology | SustainabilityDDC classification: 631.52 | 660.6 Online resources: Disponible en Springer
Contents:
Preface -- Part 1. Introduction -- Chapter 1. Introduction -- Chapter 2. Protected Cropping in Horticulture -- Chapter 3. Plant Secondary Compounds -- Chapter 4. Hydroponic Systems in Horticulture -- Part 2. Controllable Production Factors in Horticulture -- Chapter 5. Light -- Chapter 6. Nutrient deficiencies -- Chapter 7. Salt stress -- Chapter 8. Drought Stress -- Chapter 9. Thermal Stress -- Chapter 10. Wounding -- Chapter 11. Mycorrhiza -- Chapter 12. Microbial and Plant-Based Biostimulants -- Chapter 13. Mineral Biofortification -- Chapter 14. CO2 Enrichment -- Chapter 15. Hormones -- Chapter 16. Intercropping -- Part 3. Exercise -- Chapter 17. Acrylamide Concentrations of Deep-fried Potatoes -- Chapter 18. Enrichment of Anthocyanin in Pak Choi -- Chapter 19. Improving Flavor of Tomatoes -- Chapter 20. Biofortification of Carrots -- Chapter 21. Enrichment of Flavonoids in Lettuce -- Chapter 22. Effect of Germination Substrates on Tomato Plants -- Index.
In: Springer Nature eBookSummary: An understanding of crop physiology and ecophysiology enables the horticulturist to manipulate a plant's metabolism towards the production of compounds that are beneficial for human health when that plant is part of the diet or the source of phytopharmaceutical compounds. The first part of the book introduces the concept of Controlled Environment Horticulture as a horticultural production technique used to maximize yields via the optimization of access to growing factors. The second part describes the use of this production technique in order to induce stress responses in the plant via the modulation of these growing factors and, importantly, the way that this manipulation induces defence reactions in the plant resulting in the production of compounds beneficial for human health. The third part provides guidance for the implementation of this knowledge in horticultural production.
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Preface -- Part 1. Introduction -- Chapter 1. Introduction -- Chapter 2. Protected Cropping in Horticulture -- Chapter 3. Plant Secondary Compounds -- Chapter 4. Hydroponic Systems in Horticulture -- Part 2. Controllable Production Factors in Horticulture -- Chapter 5. Light -- Chapter 6. Nutrient deficiencies -- Chapter 7. Salt stress -- Chapter 8. Drought Stress -- Chapter 9. Thermal Stress -- Chapter 10. Wounding -- Chapter 11. Mycorrhiza -- Chapter 12. Microbial and Plant-Based Biostimulants -- Chapter 13. Mineral Biofortification -- Chapter 14. CO2 Enrichment -- Chapter 15. Hormones -- Chapter 16. Intercropping -- Part 3. Exercise -- Chapter 17. Acrylamide Concentrations of Deep-fried Potatoes -- Chapter 18. Enrichment of Anthocyanin in Pak Choi -- Chapter 19. Improving Flavor of Tomatoes -- Chapter 20. Biofortification of Carrots -- Chapter 21. Enrichment of Flavonoids in Lettuce -- Chapter 22. Effect of Germination Substrates on Tomato Plants -- Index.

An understanding of crop physiology and ecophysiology enables the horticulturist to manipulate a plant's metabolism towards the production of compounds that are beneficial for human health when that plant is part of the diet or the source of phytopharmaceutical compounds. The first part of the book introduces the concept of Controlled Environment Horticulture as a horticultural production technique used to maximize yields via the optimization of access to growing factors. The second part describes the use of this production technique in order to induce stress responses in the plant via the modulation of these growing factors and, importantly, the way that this manipulation induces defence reactions in the plant resulting in the production of compounds beneficial for human health. The third part provides guidance for the implementation of this knowledge in horticultural production.

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