Freshly Printed - allow 6 days lead
Couldn't load pickup availability
Herbicides and Plant Metabolism
This volume provides a review of the most important areas of the biochemistry of herbicide action.
A. D. Dodge (Edited by)
9780521344227, Cambridge University Press
Hardback, published 25 January 1990
288 pages
23.4 x 15.5 x 2.2 cm, 0.552 kg
"...a welcome and valuable reference on my bookshelf. Water utility microbiologists, researchers and academics alike will appreciate this book, which is good value for the money while filling a gap in the available review literature." L. I. Sly, Quarterly Review of Biology
This volume provides a review of the most important areas of the biochemistry of herbicide action. The introductory chapter is a review of the field of herbicide discovery, and this is followed by chapters dealing with the herbicidal inhibition of photosynthesis, carotenoid biosynthesis, lipid biosynthesis, and amino acid biosynthesis. The metabolism of herbicides is discussed with particular reference to the formation of toxic components from non-toxic chemicals, and also the inactivation of toxic chemicals as a basis for selectivity. The final chapters are concerned with mechanisms of herbicide resistance in plants and the possibility of transferring resistance to susceptible crops. The book is completed with a glossary of the most important herbicidal chemicals mentioned in the text. The volume is suitable for senior undergraduates and graduates in agriculture, horticulture, applied biology and plant biochemistry and for M.Sc. students in crop protection; it will also appeal to industrial research scientists involved in herbicide development.
Contributors
Preface
1. Herbicide use and invention K. P. Parry
2. Herbicides interacting with photosystem II J. J. S. van Rensen
3. Herbicides interacting with photosystem I A. D. Dodge
4. Carotenoids and chlorophylls: herbicidal inhibition of pigment biosynthesis G. Britton, P. Barry and A. J. Young
5. Herbicides inhibiting lipid synthesis J. L. Harwood, S. M. Ridley and K. A. Walker
6. The shikimate pathway as a target for herbicides J. R. Coggins
7. Herbicides that inhibit the biosynthesis of branched chain amino acids T. R. Hawkes, J. L. Howard and S. E. Pontin
8. Glutamine synthetase and its inhibition P. J. Lea and S. M. Ridley
9. Metabolism of herbicides - detoxification as a basis of selectivity W. J. Owen
10. Bioactivated herbicides M. W. Kerr
11. Mechanisms involved in the evolution of herbicide resistance in weeds P. D. Putwain and H. A. Collin
12. Conferring herbicide resistance on susceptible crops J. Gressel
Herbicide glossary
Herbicide index
General index.
Subject Areas: Botany & plant sciences [PST]
