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Showing 1 - 8 of 8 matches in All Departments
Genetically Modified Plants, Second Edition, provides an updated roadmap and science-based methodology for assessing the safety of genetic modification technologies, as well as risk assessment approaches from regulators across different agroecosystems. This new edition also includes expanded coverage of technologies used in plant improvement, such as RNA-dependent DNA methylation, reverse breeding, agroinfiltration, and gene-editing technologies such as CRISPR and TALENS. This book is an essential resource for anyone interested in crop improvement, including students and researchers, practitioners in regulatory agencies, and policymakers involved in plant biotechnology risk assessment.
A transgenic organism is a plant, animal, bacterium, or other
living organism that has had a foreign gene added to it by means of
genetic engineering. Transgenic plants can arise by natural
movement of genes between species, by cross-pollination based
hybridization between different plant species (which is a common
event in flowering plant evolution), or by laboratory manipulations
by artificial insertion of genes from another species. Methods used
in traditional breeding that generate transgenic plants by
non-recombinant methods are widely familiar to professional plant
scientists, and serve important roles in securing a sustainable
future for agriculture by protecting crops from pest and helping
land and water to be used more efficiently.
"Comparative Plant Virology" provides a complete overview of our
current knowledge of plant viruses, including background
information on plant viruses and up-to-date aspects of virus
biology and control. It deals mainly with concepts rather than
detail. The focus will be on plant viruses but due to the changing
environment of how virology is taught, comparisons will be drawn
with viruses of other kingdomes, animals, fungi and bacteria. It
has been written for students of plant virology, plant pathology,
virology and microbiology who have no previous knowledge of plant
viruses or of virology in general.
The seminal text "Plant Virology" is now in its fifth edition. It
has been 10 years since the publication of the fourth edition,
during which there has been an explosion of conceptual and factual
advances. The fifth edition of "Plant Virology" updates and revises
many details of the previous edition while retaining the important
earlier results that constitute the field's conceptual foundation.
Revamped art, along with fully updated references and increased
focus on molecular biology, transgenic resistance, aphid
transmission, and new, cutting-edge topics, bring the volume up to
date and maintain its value as an essential reference for
researchers and students in the field.
The Oregon artist Nelson Sandgren (1917-2006) worked in three distinct media - oil painting, watercolor, and lithography - distinguishing himself in each of these modes throughout his sixty-five-year career. Nelson Sandgren: An Artist's Life is the first in-depth study of this mid-century Oregon modernist who was born in Canada, grew up in Chicago, and moved with his family to Oregon during the Depression. As a watercolorist who loved to paint on site, often on the Oregon coast, Sandgren worked in the tradition of Winslow Homer and John Marin. In oil painting, he combined modernist abstraction with Pacific Northwest landscape imagery, in this practice paralleling Louis Bunce, Carl Morris, and other Oregon moderns. As a lithographer, Sandgren was central to the printmaking culture that Gordon Gilkey promoted at Oregon State university, where Sandgren taught for thirty-eight years. Roger Hull provides a detailed biography and a close analysis of Sandgren's key artworks while demonstrating Sandgren's significant place in Pacific Northwest modernist tradition.
Clifford Gleason (1913-1978), who grew up in Salem and spent his adult life in both Salem and Portland, was a talented and highly original artist whose work remains of keen interest to a small and loyal group of collectors and artists but whose accomplishments are less generally known than those of other Oregon mid-century artists.Clifford Gleason: The Promise of Paint serves as both an introduction and a definitive study of an 'artist's artist,' who until now has not received the sustained attention that he and his work are due. It traces his career from the 1930s until the last months of his difficult life-difficult because of alcoholism, near poverty, and homosexuality in a repressive era. In paint, Gleason found the only realm in which he felt competent, confident, and successful; paint offered the promise of accomplishment. Roger Hull's knowledgeable text offers a chronological study combining biography, analysis of Gleason's artworks, and assessment of his place within the broader context of contemporary and Pacific Northwest art. Published in conjunction with an exhibition at the Hallie Ford Museum of Art at Willamette University, this richly illustrated monograph examines Gleason's identity as a modern artist as he responded to the rapid changes in artistic modernism from the late 1930s, when he studied with Louis Bunce at the Salem Federal Art Center, to the 1970s, when he rethought the legacy of Abstract Expressionism in works that are unique to him, visually beautiful and poetically expressive.
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