Viruses are a huge threat to agriculture. In the past, viruses used to  be controlled using conventional methods, such as crop rotation and  destruction of the infected plants, but now there are more novel ways to  control them. This volume focuses on topics that must be better  understood in order to foster future developments in basic and applied  plant virology. These range from virus epidemiology and virus/host  co-evolution and the control of vector-mediated transmission through to  systems biology investigations of virus-cell interactions. Other  chapters cover the current status of signalling in natural resistance  and the potential for a revival in the use of cross-protection, as well  as future opportunities for the deployment of the under-utilized but  highly effective crop protection strategy of pathogen-derived  resistance.
Natural and engineered resistance to plant viruses, Volume 76: Part II
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Labels: Biology and Genetics