Genetic Resistance to Drought in Maize and Its Relationship in Aflatoxins Production

Autor: Ricardo Ernesto Preciado-Ortiz, Ernesto Moreno Martinez, Ramón G. Guevara-González, Juan Jesús Cervantes-Landaverde, Irineo Torres-Pacheco, Angela María Chapa-Oliver, Laura Mejía-Teniente, Moises Alejandro Vazquez-Cruz
Jazyk: angličtina
Rok vydání: 2011
Předmět:
Zdroj: Aflatoxins-Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
Popis: Maize (Zea mays L.) is one of the most important crops in the world. It is the third most important food grain crop in the developing world and is estimated that the demand for maize in developing countries will grow by 50%, from 558 million tons in 1995 to 837 million tons in 2020. Much of this increased demand will be needed by domestic supply for developing countries, which will require intensifying production on existing agricultural land (Ribaut and Ragot, 2007). Drought is one of the prime abiotic stress in crops in the world. Crop yield losses due to drought stress are considerable. Particularly in maize, as an example, drought is the major stress affecting productivity in Africa leading up to 70% or total crop loss (Muoma et al., 2010; Ashraf, 2010). Although a variety of approaches have been used to alleviate the problem of drought, plant breeding, either conventional breeding or genetic engineering, seems to be an efficient and economic means of tailoring crops to enable them to grow successfully in drought-prone environments (Ashraf, 2010). In turn, aflatoxins are found to contaminate a wide variety of important agricultural products such as corn, peanuts, tree nuts and cottonseed especially under extreme heat and drought conditions (Payne, 1998; Chen et al., 2003). Aflatoxin contamination significantly reduces the value of grain as an animal feed and export commodity (Chen et al., 2002).
Databáze: OpenAIRE