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Expanding the Production and Use of Cool Season Food Legumes

A global perspective of peristent constraints and of opportunities and strategies for further increasing the productivity and use of pea, lentil, faba bean, chickpea and grasspea in different farming systems

Specificaties
Paperback, 992 blz. | Engels
Springer Netherlands | 2012
ISBN13: 9789401043434
Rubricering
Springer Netherlands 0e druk, 2012 9789401043434
€ 60,99
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Samenvatting

The goal of the Second International Food Legume Research Conference held in Cairo, Egypt was to build on the success of the first conference held nearly 6 years earlier at Spokane, Washington, USA. It was at that first conference where the decision was made to hold the second Conference in Egypt and so near the ancestral home of these food legume crops. It has been a long held view that the cool season food legumes had their origin in the Mediterranean basin and the Near-east arc, and there is little doubt that food legumes were a staple food of the ancient Egyptian civilization. The cool season food legumes have the reputation for producing at least some yield under adverse conditions of poor fertility and limited moisture, i. e. , in circumstances where other crops are likely to fail completely. Yields of cool season food legumes are particularly poor in those regions where they are most important to local populations. The influx of more profitable crops such as wheat, maize, and soybeans have gradually relegated the food legumes to marginal areas with poor fertility and limited water which exposes them to even greater degrees of stress. In the past two decades, production of food legumes has declined in most of the developing countries while at the same time it has expanded greatly in Canada, Australia, and most notably in Turkey.

Specificaties

ISBN13:9789401043434
Taal:Engels
Bindwijze:paperback
Aantal pagina's:992
Uitgever:Springer Netherlands
Druk:0

Inhoudsopgave

Preface. Editorial Notes and Glossary. Processing and animal feeds. Climate change and biotic and abiotic stresses. Host plant resistance to manage biotic stress. Policy incentives. Breeding methods and selection indices. Infrastructural support. Cool season food legume breeding. Management to control biotic and abiotic stress. Biotechnology and gene mapping. Crop physiology and productivity. Farmers' constraints and on-farm research. Reports of seven concurrent discussion groups based on geography. Continuation of the IFLRC concept. Conference summary. Author index.
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        Expanding the Production and Use of Cool Season Food Legumes