Inicio  /  PLANT PATHOLOGY  /  Vol: 47 Núm: 5 Par: 0 (1998)  /  Artículo
ARTÍCULO
TITULO

The Gene-for-Gene Relationship in Plant-Parasite Interactions - Book reviews: Edited by I. R. Crute, E. B. Holub and J. J. Burdon. 24 × 16 cm, 432 pp. Wallingford, UK: CAB International, 1997. Price £65/US$

Johnson    
Roy    

Resumen

No disponible

 Artículos similares

       
 
Roberto Fanigliulo, Marcello Biocca, Renato Grilli, Laura Fornaciari, Pietro Gallo, Stefano Benigni, Paolo Mattei and Daniele Pochi    
The performance of agricultural tires varies with the characteristics of both the terrain and the tractors on which they are mounted, which differently affect the rolling resistance, the traction capacity, and the slip. To reduce the variability of test ... ver más
Revista: Agriculture

 
Zengwei Xu and Shanshan Miao    
Public spaces enhance social interactions and contacts, yet few scholars have linked public spaces to the governance of commons for rural waste management. We thus explore the direct and mediated effects of public spaces on collective action for rural wa... ver más
Revista: Agriculture

 
Anna Szczepanska-Przekota    
Mutual interactions between the agricultural commodities futures market and the spot market are some of the most important relationships that can be observed between the financial market and the real economy. The process of the flow of price impulses bet... ver más
Revista: Agriculture

 
Jinyang Liu, Yun Lin, Jinbin Chen, Chenchen Xue, Ranran Wu, Qiang Yan, Xin Chen and Xingxing Yuan    
Heterosis has been utilized in crops for a long time, and although crop fertility is the basis for the utilization of heterosis, there is limited information concerning the genic male sterility (GMS) of mungbean. Therefore, based on the genic male steril... ver más
Revista: Agriculture

 
Anandkumar Naorem, Somasundaram Jayaraman, Ram C. Dalal, Ashok Patra, Cherukumalli Srinivasa Rao and Rattan Lal    
Soil organic carbon (SOC) pool has been extensively studied in the carbon (C) cycling of terrestrial ecosystems. In dryland regions, however, soil inorganic carbon (SIC) has received increasing attention due to the high accumulation of SIC in arid soils ... ver más
Revista: Agriculture