Seed Biology and Yield of Grain Crops Edition 2

Hardback
March 2017
9781780647708
More details
  • Publisher
    CABI
  • Published
    29th March 2017
  • ISBN 9781780647708
  • Language English
  • Pages 232 pp.
  • Size 6.125" x 9.5"
  • Images graphs
$158.15

This second edition of an established title examines the determination of grain crop yield from a unique perspective-- by concentrating on the influence of the seed itself. As the food supply for an expanding world population is based on grain crops harvested for their seeds, understanding the process of seed growth and its regulation is crucial to our efforts to increase production and meet the needs of that population. Assimilatory processes such as photosynthesis and the biosynthetic processes in the seed, which are partly regulated within the seed itself, determine the yield of grain crops. Providing a timely update in this field and highlighting the impact of the seed on grain crop yields, this book:

· describes all aspects of seed growth and development, including environmental and genetic effects on growth rate and length of the filling period.
· discusses the role of the seed in determining the two main yield components: individual seed weight and number of seeds per unit area.
· uses the developed concepts and models to understand crop management and yield improvement.

Substantially updated with new research and further developments of the practical applications of the concepts explored, this book is essential reading for those concerned with seed science and crop yield, including agronomists, crop physiologists, plant breeders, and extension workers. It is also a valuable source of information for lecturers and graduate students of agronomy and plant physiology.

1: Introduction

2: Seed Growth and Development

3: Seed Growth Rate and Seed-Fill Duration: Variation and Regulation.

4: Yield Components-Regulation by the Seed

5: The Seed, Crop Management, and Yield

6: The Way Forward

Dennis B. Egli, PhD

Dennis Egli holds degrees from Pennsylvania State University (B.S. in Agronomy, 1965) and the University of Illinois [M.S. (1967) and Ph.D. (1969 in Crop Physiology). He was employed by the University of Kentucky as a Crop Physiologist in the Plant and Soil Sciences Department from 1969 until he retired in 2018. He taught graduate courses in Crop Ecology and Principles of Yield Physiology, directed graduate students, and did research in Crop Physiology and Seed Science (germination and vigor of planting seed).