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Return to Resistance: Breeding Crops to Reduce Pesticide Dependence

AUTHOR Robinson Raoul a
PUBLISHER AG Access (05/14/2014)
PRODUCT TYPE eBook (Other)

Description
In the tradition of Silent Spring, Raoul Robinson's Return to Resistance calls for a revolution. Traditional plant breeding techniques have led us to depend more and more on chemical pesticides to protect ourcrops. Return to Resistance shows gardeners, farmers, and plant breeders how to use a long-neglected technique to create hardy new plant varieties that are naturally resistant to pests and disease. Horizontal resistance breeding has been largely ignored in this century due to the popularity and apparent successes of the Mendelian geneticists. However the colossal, unrecognized failure of modern crops is their extreme susceptiblity to pests and diseases, and the consequent necessity to spray them repeatedly with pesticides. We have come to accept exposure to pesticides in our food as a necessary evil.
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Product Format
Product Details
ISBN-13: 9781552503638
ISBN-10: 1552503631
Content Language: English
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Page Count: 497
Carton Quantity: 0
Country of Origin: US
Subject Information
BISAC Categories
Science | Life Sciences - Botany
Dewey Decimal: 581
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
publisher marketing
In the tradition of Silent Spring, Raoul Robinson's Return to Resistance calls for a revolution. Traditional plant breeding techniques have led us to depend more and more on chemical pesticides to protect ourcrops. Return to Resistance shows gardeners, farmers, and plant breeders how to use a long-neglected technique to create hardy new plant varieties that are naturally resistant to pests and disease. Horizontal resistance breeding has been largely ignored in this century due to the popularity and apparent successes of the Mendelian geneticists. However the colossal, unrecognized failure of modern crops is their extreme susceptiblity to pests and diseases, and the consequent necessity to spray them repeatedly with pesticides. We have come to accept exposure to pesticides in our food as a necessary evil.
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eBook
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