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Abiotic Stress Tolerance and Genetic Diversity in Plants, 2nd Edition

A special issue of International Journal of Molecular Sciences (ISSN 1422-0067). This special issue belongs to the section "Molecular Plant Sciences".

Deadline for manuscript submissions: 31 January 2025 | Viewed by 74

Special Issue Editor


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Guest Editor
1. Corporación Colombiana de Investigación Agropecuaria AGROSAVIA, C.I. La Selva, Km 7 Vía Rionegro—Las Palmas, Rionegro 054048, Colombia
2. Facultad de Ciencias Agrarias, Departamento de Ciencias Forestales, Universidad Nacional de Colombia—Sede Medellín, Medellín 050034, Colombia
Interests: plant genetics; crop breeding; hybridization; poliploidy; fruit trees
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Special Issue Information

Dear Colleagues,

This Special Issue is a continuation of our previous Special Issue “Abiotic Stress Tolerance and Genetic Diversity in Plants”.

Plant breeding, plant conservation and plant restoration efforts urgently demand the development of novel adaptive sources in order to cope with increasing abiotic pressures. However, standing genetic diversity for tolerance to abiotic stress is often lacking from traditional gene pools. Therefore, cryptic pockets of genetic and ecological diversity may provide hidden adaptations, genotypes and alleles to cope with abiotic pressures. Meanwhile, modern methodological achievements in genomics, molecular biology, bioinformatics, biotechnology and geographical modeling are offering new perspectives on the genomic bases and ecological drivers of abiotic stress tolerance. These achievements may lead to new interdisciplinary areas where plant breeding, restoration ecology and conservation genetics could converge. Therefore, this Special Issue, entitled “Abiotic Stress Tolerance and Genetic Diversity in Plants, 2nd Edition”, aims to compile innovative research on the exploration, leveraging and utilization of plant genetic diversity to improve abiotic stress tolerance traits using a diverse array of techniques and perspectives. Ultimately, we envision an interplay among genetic, molecular, ecological and modeling disciplines to cope with abiotic stresses such as, but not limited to, drought, heat, flooding, salinity, frost and soil toxicity.

Dr. Andrés J. Cortés
Guest Editor

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Keywords

  • biodiversity
  • molecular breeding
  • comparative genomics
  • abiotic stress adaptation
  • genetic mapping
  • predictive breeding
  • genomic prediction
  • assisted gene flow
  • plant breeding
  • restoration ecology
  • conservation genetics

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