TY - BOOK ID - 145855193 TI - Study of the Influence of Abiotic and Biotic Stress Factors on Horticultural Plants AU - Hanaka, Agnieszka AU - Jaroszuk-Ściseł, Jolanta AU - Majewska, Małgorzata PY - 2022 PB - Basel MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute DB - UniCat KW - Research & information: general KW - Biology, life sciences KW - abiotic stress KW - strawberry KW - companion plants KW - phytoremediation KW - cold stress KW - cold-responsive genes KW - anti-oxidants KW - proline KW - malondialdehyde KW - hormone profiling KW - 5-aminolevulinic acid KW - Buxus megistophylla KW - chlorophyll fast fluorescence characteristics KW - mineral nutrition KW - urban road greening KW - orchid KW - transformed ecosystems KW - fly ash KW - metals KW - adaptive responses KW - water exchange KW - leaf mesostructure KW - photosynthetic pigments KW - photosynthesis KW - plant introduction KW - grapevine KW - maximum daily shrinkage KW - daily increase KW - stem water potential KW - leaf relative water content KW - signal intensity KW - Humulus lupulus L. KW - soil porosity KW - soil bulk density KW - liming KW - hop ridges KW - Vitis spp. KW - piwi cultivars KW - disease-resistant varieties KW - malic acid KW - ripening KW - fruit composition KW - downy mildew KW - phosphite stress KW - antioxidant enzyme KW - hydrogen peroxide KW - root morphology KW - potato KW - genotypes KW - Brassica oleracea var. acephala KW - short-term cold stress KW - phytochemicals KW - pigments KW - antioxidant enzymes KW - chitosan (CTS) KW - lettuce KW - salinity KW - soluble sugars KW - climate change KW - drought stress KW - biopreparations KW - plant stimulation KW - plant growth-promoting microorganisms KW - watermelon KW - rootstock KW - gene expression UR - https://www.unicat.be/uniCat?func=search&query=sysid:145855193 AB - We would like to provide the scientists a set of studies entitled "Study of the Influence of Abiotic and Biotic Stress Factors on Horticultural Plants". The reprint book contains 12 papers about the influence of the stress factors on the plant growth and soil parameters. Authors descripted the impact of the biotic and abiotic stress factors (i.e., high, and low temperature, salt, inorganic pollutants such as salts, heavy metals, phosphite, as well as irrigation) on the physiological, biochemical, and anatomical changes occurring in the plants at the cellular, tissue, organ, and whole plant level. The subject of these studies were different plant species, i.e., watermelon, lettuce, kale, potato, grapevine, hops, orchid, strawberry, and boxwood. The ideas of the papers can be divided into five topics: (1) achieving better quality of plant material for food production by changes made in the growth conditions, metabolic and genetic modifications; (2) increasing the plant resistance to environmental stresses by application of exogenous compounds of different chemical character; (3) reducing plant stress caused by anthropogenic activity applying nonmodified and genetically modified plants; (4) mitigating drought stress by irrigation; and 5) the positive effect of plant growth-promoting microorganisms on horticulture plants performance during drought stress. ER -