Pulse Brain · Growing Health Evidence Index
Peer-reviewed

Developing climate‐resilient crops: improving plant tolerance to stress combination

Rosa M. Rivero, Ron Mittler, Eduardo Blumwald, Sara I. Zandalinas

The Plant Journal · 2021

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Summary

Global warming and climate change are driving an alarming increase in the frequency and intensity of different abiotic stresses, such as droughts, heat waves, cold snaps, and flooding, negatively affecting crop yields and causing food shortages. Climate change is also altering the composition and behavior of different insect and pathogen populations adding to yield losses worldwide. Additional constraints to agriculture are caused by the increasing amounts of human-generated pollutants, as well as the negative impact of climate change on soil microbiomes. Although in the laboratory, we are trained to study the impact of individual stress conditions on plants, in the field many stresses, pollutants, and pests could simultaneously or sequentially affect plants, causing conditions of stress c

Source type
Peer-reviewed study
DOI
10.1111/tpj.15483
Catalogue ID
SNmojqlxi4-1pdmhp
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