Stress Tolerance in Horticulture: From Germplasm Evaluation, Physiology, Molecular, Metabolism and Biotechnology to Plant Genetic Improvement

A special issue of Horticulturae (ISSN 2311-7524). This special issue belongs to the section "Biotic and Abiotic Stress".

Deadline for manuscript submissions: 31 July 2025 | Viewed by 112

Special Issue Editor


E-Mail
Guest Editor
Wuhan Academy of Agricultural Sciences, LuoYu East Road 38, Wuhan 430074, China
Interests: evaluation of plant abiotic stress and involved mechanisms; horticultural biotechnology used to treat abiotic stress; horticultural plant genetic markers for key agronomic traits and breeding

Special Issue Information

Dear Colleagues,

Horticultural plants are not only a source of abundant food and essential nutrients for humans, but they also have many medical and health functions. Not only that, they are very important in environmental beautification, but also play an important role in maintaining the ecological environment, reducing soil pollution, controlling atmospheric humidity and reducing dust and noise.

Currently, horticultural plants are challenged by abiotic stress factors such as climate change, heavy metal pollution, rising near-surface ozone concentrations, drought or flooding, extreme temperatures (cold, frost and high temperatures), as well as toxicity from salt alkali, mineral deficiencies and other pollutants. The negative effects of abiotic stress can lead to changes in the growth, development and metabolism of horticultural plants, and in extreme cases, can also result in plant death.

Therefore, it is necessary to evaluate how horticultural plants can tolerate and respond to abiotic stress factors.

This Special Issue welcomes submissions of research exploring the effects of different abiotic stresses on horticultural plant (fruit tree, vegetables, flower and medical plants) germplasm resources, including growth, development, absorption, accumulation and tolerance phenotype of horticultural plants. We also welcome research related to cellular oxidative stress, antioxidant and molecular level responses, induced defense and metabolic mechanisms, toxic effects, etc., as well as efforts to solve the stress problems involving physiological approaches, genetic improvement and breeding measures, agronomic cultural practice and biotechnology.

Dr. Linchuan Fang
Guest Editor

Manuscript Submission Information

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Keywords

  • horticultural plants
  • oxidative stress
  • extreme temperature
  • photosystem II
  • transcription regulation

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Published Papers

This special issue is now open for submission.
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