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Sustainable increase in agricultural production while keeping the
environmental quality, agro-ecosystem function and biodiversity is
a real challenge in current agricultural practices. Application of
PGPR can help in meeting the expected demand for increasing
agricultural productivity to feed the world's booming population.
Global concern over the demerits of chemicals in agriculture has
diverted the attention of researchers towards sustainable
agriculture by utilizing the potential of Plant Growth Promoting
Rhizobacteria (PGPR). Use of PGPR as biofertilizers, biopesticides,
soil, and plant health managers has gained considerable
agricultural and commercial significance. The book Plant Growth
Promoting Rhizobacteria (PGPR): Prospects for Sustainable
Agriculture has contributions in the form of book chapter from 25
eminent global researchers, that discusses about the PGPRs and
their role in growth promotion of various crop plants, suppression
of wide range of phytopathogens, their formulation, effect of
various factors on growth and performance of PGPR, assessment of
diversity of PGPR through microsatellites and role of PGPR in
mitigating biotic and abiotic stress.This book will be helpful for
students, teachers, researchers, and entrepreneurs involved in PGPR
and allied fields. The book will be highly useful to researchers,
teachers, students, entrepreneurs, and policymakers.
Recent changes in the pattern of agricultural practices from use of
hazardous pesticides to natural (organic) cultivation has brought
into focus the use of agriculturally important microorganisms for
carrying out analogous functions. The reputation of plant growth
promoting rhizomicroorganisms (PGPRs) is due to their antagonistic
mechanisms against most of the fungal and bacterial phytopathogens.
The biocontrol potential of agriculturally important microorganisms
is mostly attributed to their bioactive secondary metabolites.
However, low shelf life of many potential agriculturally important
microorganisms impairs their use in agriculture and adoption by
farmers. The focal theme of this book is to highlight the potential
of employing biosynthesized secondary metabolites (SMs) from
agriculturally important microorganisms for management of notorious
phytopathogens, as a substitute of the currently available whole
organism formulations and also as alternatives to hazardous
synthetic pesticides. Accordingly, we have incorporated a
comprehensive rundown of sections which particularly examine the
SMs synthesized, secreted and induced by various agriculturally
important microorganisms and their applications in agriculture.
Section 1 includes discussion on biosynthesized antimicrobial
secondary metabolites from fungal biocontrol agents. This section
will cover the various issues such as development of formulation of
secondary metabolites, genomic basis of metabolic diversity,
metabolomic profiling of fungal biocontrol agents, novel classes of
antimicrobial peptides. The section 1 will also cover the role of
these secondary metabolites in antagonist-host interaction and
application of biosynthesized antimicrobial secondary metabolites
for management of plant diseases. Section 2 will discuss the
biosynthesized secondary metabolites from bacterial PGPRs, strain
dependent effects on plant metabolome profile, bio-prospecting
various isolates of bacterial PGPRs for potential secondary
metabolites and non-target effects of PGPR on microbial community
structure and functions. Section 3 encompasses synthesis of
antimicrobial secondary metabolites from beneficial endophytes,
bio-prospecting medicinal and aromatic hosts and effect of
endophytic SMs on plants under biotic and biotic stress conditions.
Increasing agro productivity to feed a growing global population
under the present climate scenario requires optimizing the use of
resources and adopting sustainable agricultural production. This
can be achieved by using plant beneficial bacteria, i.e., those
bacteria that enhance plant growth under abiotic stress conditions,
and more specifically, microorganisms such as plant growth
promoting rhizobacteria (PGPR), which are the most promising
candidates in this regard. Attaining sustainable agricultural
production while preserving environmental quality, agro-ecosystem
functions and biodiversity represents a major challenge for current
agricultural practices; further, the traditional use of chemical
inputs (fertilizers, pesticides, nutrients etc.) poses serious
threats to crop productivity, soil fertility and the nutritional
value of farm produce. Given these risks, managing pests and
diseases, maintaining agro-ecosystem health, and avoiding health
issues for humans and animals have now become key priorities. The
use of PGPR as biofertilizers, plant growth promoters,
biopesticides, and soil and plant health managers has attracted
considerable attention among researchers, agriculturists, farmers,
policymakers and consumers alike. Using PGPR can help meet the
expected demand for global agricultural productivity to feed the
world's booming population, which is predicted to reach roughly 9
billion by 2050. However, to do so, PGPR strains must be safe for
the environment, offer considerable plant growth promotion and
biocontrol potential, be compatible with useful soil rhizobacteria,
and be able to withstand various biotic and abiotic stresses.
Accordingly, the book also highlights the need for better strains
of PGPR to complement increasing agro-productivity.
The Navigation of Feeling critiques recent psychological and anthropological research on emotions. William M. Reddy offers a new theory of emotions and historical change, drawing on research from many academic disciplines. This new theory makes it possible to see how emotions change over time, how emotions have a very important impact on the shape of history, and how different social orders either facilitate emotional life or make it more difficult. This theory is fully explored in a case study of the French Revolution.
Combining the perspectives of anthropology and social history,
Professor Reddy traces the transition from precapitalist to
capitalist culture in the French textile industry from 1750 to
1900. He shows how and why a new conception of the social order
based on the idea of the market began to emerge, and examines the
attendant political and social conflict. Focusing on the northern
regional centres in France which led the movement toward
mechanisation, the author - employs the methods of cultural
anthropology to find that even by 1900 French textile labourers had
failed to develop a social identity commensurate with the idea of
wage labour. This discovery leads him to a critique of the market
idea that suggests radical and prevalent interpretations of the
social history of industrialisation as well as of the concept of
'class consciousness'.
The concept of class, along with its correlates -m class interest,
class conflict, class consciousness - ramain indispensable tools of
historical explanation. Yet research over the last twenty-five
years, especially on the histories of England, France, and Germany,
has revealed an increasingly poor fit between these concepts and
the reality they purport to explain. Some historians have reacted
by rejecting class; others have proposed bold revisions in our
understanding of it that enable it to encompass new research
findings. This study does neither. Instead, building on
interpretive method Professor Reddy proposes to replace class with
an alternative concept that seeks to capture from a new angle the
fundamental relations of exchange and authority that have shaped
social life in modern Europe.
In the twelfth century, the Catholic Church attempted a
thoroughgoing reform of marriage and sexual behavior aimed at
eradicating sexual desire from Christian lives. Seeking a refuge
from the very serious condemnations of the Church and relying on a
courtly culture that was already preoccupied with honor and
secrecy, European poets, romance writers, and lovers devised a
vision of love as something quite different from desire. Romantic
love was thus born as a movement of covert resistance. In "The
Making of Romantic Love", William M. Reddy illuminates the birth of
a cultural movement that managed to regulate selfish desire and
render it innocent - or innocent enough. Reddy strikes out from
this historical moment on an international exploration of love,
contrasting the medieval development of romantic love in Europe
with contemporaneous eastern traditions in Bengal and Orissa, and
in Heian Japan from 900 to 1200 CE, where one finds no trace of an
opposition between love and desire. In this comparative framework,
Reddy tells an appealing tale about the rise and fall of various
practices of longing, underscoring the uniqueness of the European
concept of sexual desire.
Sustainable increase in agricultural production while keeping the
environmental quality, agro-ecosystem function and biodiversity is
a real challenge in current agricultural practices. Application of
PGPR can help in meeting the expected demand for increasing
agricultural productivity to feed the world's booming population.
Global concern over the demerits of chemicals in agriculture has
diverted the attention of researchers towards sustainable
agriculture by utilizing the potential of Plant Growth Promoting
Rhizobacteria (PGPR). Use of PGPR as biofertilizers, biopesticides,
soil, and plant health managers has gained considerable
agricultural and commercial significance. The book Plant Growth
Promoting Rhizobacteria (PGPR): Prospects for Sustainable
Agriculture has contributions in the form of book chapter from 25
eminent global researchers, that discusses about the PGPRs and
their role in growth promotion of various crop plants, suppression
of wide range of phytopathogens, their formulation, effect of
various factors on growth and performance of PGPR, assessment of
diversity of PGPR through microsatellites and role of PGPR in
mitigating biotic and abiotic stress.This book will be helpful for
students, teachers, researchers, and entrepreneurs involved in PGPR
and allied fields. The book will be highly useful to researchers,
teachers, students, entrepreneurs, and policymakers.
Increasing agro productivity to feed a growing global population
under the present climate scenario requires optimizing the use of
resources and adopting sustainable agricultural production. This
can be achieved by using plant beneficial bacteria, i.e., those
bacteria that enhance plant growth under abiotic stress conditions,
and more specifically, microorganisms such as plant growth
promoting rhizobacteria (PGPR), which are the most promising
candidates in this regard. Attaining sustainable agricultural
production while preserving environmental quality, agro-ecosystem
functions and biodiversity represents a major challenge for current
agricultural practices; further, the traditional use of chemical
inputs (fertilizers, pesticides, nutrients etc.) poses serious
threats to crop productivity, soil fertility and the nutritional
value of farm produce. Given these risks, managing pests and
diseases, maintaining agro-ecosystem health, and avoiding health
issues for humans and animals have now become key priorities. The
use of PGPR as biofertilizers, plant growth promoters,
biopesticides, and soil and plant health managers has attracted
considerable attention among researchers, agriculturists, farmers,
policymakers and consumers alike. Using PGPR can help meet the
expected demand for global agricultural productivity to feed the
world's booming population, which is predicted to reach roughly 9
billion by 2050. However, to do so, PGPR strains must be safe for
the environment, offer considerable plant growth promotion and
biocontrol potential, be compatible with useful soil rhizobacteria,
and be able to withstand various biotic and abiotic stresses.
Accordingly, the book also highlights the need for better strains
of PGPR to complement increasing agro-productivity.
The Navigation of Feeling critiques recent psychological and anthropological research on emotions. William M. Reddy offers a new theory of emotions and historical change, drawing on research from many academic disciplines. This new theory makes it possible to see how emotions change over time, how emotions have a very important impact on the shape of history, and how different social orders either facilitate emotional life or make it more difficult. This theory is fully explored in a case study of the French Revolution.
Historically the field of heterogeneous catalysis has focused on
the design and optimisation of the catalytic materials. However, as
these optimisations start to reach diminishing returns, attention
has turned to non-conventional means for improving reaction
conditions such as the use of ultrasound, plasma, electromagnetic
heating and microwave heating. Microwave-assisted catalysis has
been demonstrated to be useful in a wide range of applications
including ammonia synthesis, desulfurization and production of
chemicals from biomass. Advances in Microwave-assisted
Heterogeneous Catalysis begins with the basics of microwave heating
and the role of microwaves in heterogeneous catalysis. It goes on
to cover the mechanisms of microwave specific reaction rate
enhancement, microwave-assisted synthesis of porous, nonporous and
supported metal catalysts, microwave augmented reactor technology
and microwave-induced catalysis. The application of
microwave-assisted heterogeneous catalysis in various fields of
energy conversion, environmental remediation, and bulk and
specialty chemicals synthesis are also discussed, making this a
great reference for anyone involved in catalysis research.
This title is part of UC Press's Voices Revived program, which
commemorates University of California Press's mission to seek out
and cultivate the brightest minds and give them voice, reach, and
impact. Drawing on a backlist dating to 1893, Voices Revived makes
high-quality, peer-reviewed scholarship accessible once again using
print-on-demand technology. This title was originally published in
1997.
In the twelfth century, the Catholic Church attempted a
thoroughgoing reform of marriage and sexual behavior aimed at
eradicating sexual desire from Christian lives. Seeking a refuge
from the very serious condemnations of the Church and relying on a
courtly culture that was already preoccupied with honor and
secrecy, European poets, romance writers, and lovers devised a
vision of love as something quite different from desire. aRomantic
love was thus born as a movement of covert resistance.aIn "The
Making of Romantic Love: Longing and Sexuality in Europe, South
Asia, and Japan," William M. Reddy illuminates the birth of a
cultural movement that managed to regulate selfish desire and
render it innocentOCoor innocent enough. Reddy strikes out from
this historical moment on an international exploration of love,
contrasting the medieval development of romantic love in Europe
with contemporaneous eastern traditions in Bengal and Orissa, and
in Heian Japan from 900-1200 CE, where one finds no trace of an
opposition between love and desire. In this comparative framework,
Reddy tells an appealing tale about the rise and fall of various
practices of longing, underscoring the uniqueness of the European
concept of sexual desire.
This title is part of UC Press's Voices Revived program, which
commemorates University of California Press’s mission to seek out
and cultivate the brightest minds and give them voice, reach, and
impact. Drawing on a backlist dating to 1893, Voices Revived makes
high-quality, peer-reviewed scholarship accessible once again using
print-on-demand technology. This title was originally published in
1997.
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