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Books > Professional & Technical > Agriculture & farming
"Nature has gifted man with trees for his sustainable livelihood.
Trees are an integral part of any landscape. Apart from beautifying
our surroundings, trees are used functionally to improve the
quality of environment particularly in urban areas, where the
environment is degrading at a faster rate. The significance of
growing trees is widely understood in recent days. The book on
'Flowering Trees' begins with describing India's heritage in
growing trees, the spiritual and religious significance of trees
and role of trees in indigenous landscaping and sacred groves,
where their main function is conservation of biodiversity. The
functional values of trees in modern landscaping such as to reduce
glare, climate modification, pollution control, their ecological
value and various uses for aesthetic purposes are dealt with in
detail in this book. Avenue planting is also described in detail.
Principles and designs for planting trees, methods of planting,
cultural practices, pruning, problems in tree growing and various
methods to overcome them are also described. The psychological
effects of plants on human beings and the astrological significance
of trees are discussed in this book. The book includes detailed
descriptions of ornamental, economic and medicinal trees. Separate
s on trees for Bonsai and renewable energy are also included in
this book."
The book is a classic covering flowers used in decoration of
houses, offices, restaurants, hospitals and private places of rest
and relaxation. For nature lovers, it is a paradise of colours,
forms and shapes. Fragrant flowers, flowers for bouquet making,
flowers for essences and bonsai are narrated to the enchantment of
students and scholars as well. There are 21 s dealing with general
topics in flower trade, standards, markets and global demand and
supply. The specific s deal elaborately anthuriums, carnations,
china aster, chrysanthemums, gerbera, gladiolus, helicorneas,
jasmine, marigold, orchids, roses and tube roses. An exhaustive on
new cut flowers narrates recent introductions .The Japanese Bonsai
is dealt in exquisite style. Research and development in this
sector are separately dealt with. Future prospects, trends and
globalised flower marketing are written for use of floriculturists.
Modern technology of protected growing of flowers is informative.
All the flowers indicated in the book are presented in colour
photograph forms as well.
The focus of technology development in agriculture in the last half
of 20th century was to increase the production efficiency of the
farm. For this, the Indian farmers should be updated with latest
knowledge to compete for global marketing. They must have the right
information at the right time which is possible through new
information technologies resulted in many non-agricultural fields.
In the world of Information of Communication Technology, the most
commonly available IT tools for transfer of agricultural technology
in Indian context are radio, television, video, telephone and
mobile phone, printed media, computer and internet. This book is an
outcome of the rich experiences of research work carried out by the
editors. Information technology has rooted well as one of the tools
of Transfer of Technology which are being used by both public and
private sectors for the benefit of farmeVillage Knowledge Centres
of MSSRF, E-Choupals of Indian Tobacco Company, Kisan Kendras of
Rallies, Kisan Bharath Kendras of United Phosphorus Limited, Cyber
Extension services of EID Parry's, Kisan Call Centres KCC, AGRISNET
AGMARKNET are few good examples to quote. Hence, this book entitled
"Extension of Technologies: From Labs to RFarms" is an effort to
limelight the potentiality of this tool in the field of
agricultural extension in general and transfer of technology in
particular.
Understanding the causes and contributing factors leading to
outbreaks of food-borne illness associated with contamination of
fresh produce is a worldwide challenge for everyone from the
growers of fresh-cut produce through the entire production and
delivery process. The premise of "The Produce Contamination
Problem" is that when human pathogen contamination of fresh produce
occurs, it is extremely difficult to reduce pathogen levels
sufficiently to assure microbiological safety with the currently
available technologies. A wiser strategy would be to avoid crop
production conditions that result in microbial contamination to
start.
These critical, problem-oriented chapters have been written by
researchers active in the areas of food safety and microbial
contamination during production, harvesting, packing and fresh-cut
processing of horticultural crops, and were designed to provide
methods of contamination avoidance. Coverage includes policy and
practices in the United States, Mexico and Central America, Europe,
and Japan.
Addresses food-borne contaminations from a prevention view,
providing proactive solutions to the problemsCovers core sources of
contamination and methods for identifying those sourcesIncludes
best practice and regulatory information
Scientific Perspectives of Tea Plant Horticulture and Productivity
is a complete, step-by-step guide on how to maximize tea plant
growth, yield and quality. Chapters focus on the methods of
cultivation, soil and water management, plant physiology, plant
protection and weed control, problems from pollution and climate
change, and eco-friendly remedial actions. This is an essential
read for plant biologists and tea horticulturalists as the tea
industry is struggling due to high production costs, changing
climates and diminishing plant yields, with countries in Asia
declaring the industry at 'crisis point.' Horticulturalists need
solutions to problems with plant productivity, quality, stress
management and eco-friendly cultivation practices. There have been
several technological advances in the field and horticulturalists
need guidance on how best to implement new technologies, hence the
importance of this new resource.
In this issue of Veterinary Clinics: Food Animal Practice, Guest
Editor Jeffery R. Applegate brings his considerable expertise to
the topic of Honey Bee Veterinary Medicine. Top experts in the
field cover key topics such as Apiculture, Diseases of the Honey
Bee, Population Medicine, Immunology, Nutrition, and more. Provides
in-depth, reviews in Honey Bee Veterinary Medicine, providing
actionable insights for veterinary practice. Presents the latest
information on this timely, focused topic under the leadership of
experienced editors in the field; Authors synthesize and distill
the latest research and practice guidelines to create these timely
topic-based reviews. Contains 15 relevant, practice-oriented topics
including Pesticides and the Impact on Honey Bees; Practical
Applications in Honey Bee Genetics; Foreign Pests and Diseases as
Potential Threats to North American Apiculture; Honey Bee Welfare
and Standards of Humane Euthanasia; and more.
This book aims to describe, though in a quite light way, the social
role of plant diseases, letting the reader know the topical
importance of plant pathology, as well as the role of plant
pathologists in our society. Plant diseases caused, in the past,
significant economic losses, deaths, famine, wars, and migration.
Some of them marked the history of entire countries. One example
among many: the potato late blight in Ireland in 1845. Today plant
diseases are still the cause of deaths, often silent, in developing
countries, and relevant economic losses in the industrialized ones.
This book, written with much passion, neither wants to be a plant
pathology text. On the contrary, it wants to describe, in simple
words, often enriched by the author's personal experience, various
plant diseases that, in different times and countries, did cause
severe losses and damages. Besides the so-called "historical plant
diseases", in the process of writing this book, she wanted to
describe also some diseases that, though not causing famine or
billions of losses, because of their peculiarity, might be of
interest for the readers. Thus, this book has not been conceived
and written for experts, but for a broader audience, of different
ages, willing to learn more about plant health and to understand
the reasons why so many people in the past and nowadays choose to
be plant pathologists. This is because plants produce most of the
food that we consume, that we expect to be healthy and safe, and
because plants make the world beautiful. The title "Spores" is
evocative of the reproduction mean of fungi. Spores are small,
light structures, often moving fast. The chapters of this book are
short and concise. Just like spores!
The book addresses the gap that exists in sustainable value chain
development in the context of developing and emerging economies in
meeting the sustainable development goals. The book adopts a
holistic approach and discusses significant aspects of the topic
such as challenges, opportunities, best practices, technology and
innovation, business models, and policy formulation. The chapters
focus on all the existing and potential actors in the value chain.
Comprising invited chapters from leading researchers, policymakers,
practitioners, and academicians working on this topic, this edited
book is useful for scientists, researchers, students, research
scholars, and practitioners as it builds the latest
interdisciplinary knowledge in the area. An important aspect of the
book is the case studies of already ongoing projects from various
emerging economies around the world. Contributions are divided into
four sections-sustainable food systems and circular economy:
tackling resource use, efficiency, food loss, and waste problems;
technology and innovation for food value chain development; toward
responsible food consumption; linking small farmers to markets:
markets, institutions, and trade. Significantly, the book is
organized in the context of Sustainable Development Goals and has
direct relevance and linkages with SDG 1 (poverty alleviation), SDG
2 (zero hunger), SDG 3 (good health and well-being), SDG 4 (quality
education), SDG 5 (gender equality), SDG 12 (responsible
consumption and production), SDG 13 (climate action), and SDG 17
(partnerships).
This book offers an assessment of new opportunities available for
the agricultural sector and provides technical assistance to the
Greek authorities with regards to its rural development and fishery
sector. Karantininis follows a value chain approach and analyzes
the Greek agri-food industry, breaking it down vertically and
horizontally. Vertically, the Greek agri-food chain is stripped to
its main upstream and downstream components: inputs, primary
production, distribution and retail. Horizontally, the agri-food
value chain is analyzed in terms of size, ownership, governance and
space. The author pays special attention to policy formation,
policy implementation, the political and industrial structure, land
and credit markets, education, extension and research. The author
focuses on this through three subcategories of fruits and
vegetables, aquaculture and olive oil. A number of opinions and
recommendations are presented in each section, concluding with
propositions for a new institutional structure for Greek
agriculture.
Field Crop Arthropod Pests of Economic Importance presents detailed
descriptions of the biology and ecology of important arthropod pest
of selected global field crops. Standard management options for
insect pest control on crops include biological, non-chemical, and
chemical approaches. However, because agricultural crops face a
wide range of insect pests throughout the year, it can prove
difficult to find a simple solution to insect pest control in many,
if not most, cropping systems. A whole-farm or integrated pest
management approach combines cultural, natural, and chemical
controls to maintain insect pest populations below levels that
cause economic damage to the crop. This practice requires accurate
species identification and thorough knowledge of the biology and
ecology of the target organism. Integration and effective use of
various control components is often enhanced when the target
organism is correctly identified, and its biology and ecology are
known. This book provides a key resource toward that identification
and understanding. Students and professionals in agronomy, insect
detection and survey, and economic entomology will find the book a
valuable learning aid and resource tool.
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