Plants in Alpine Regions, Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 2012
Cell Physiology of Adaption and Survival Strategies

Coordinator: Lütz Cornelius

Language: English

Approximative price 210.99 €

In Print (Delivery period: 15 days).

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Plants in Alpine Regions
Publication date:
Support: Print on demand

Approximative price 210.99 €

In Print (Delivery period: 15 days).

Add to cartAdd to cart
Plants in Alpine regions: cell physiology of adaption and survival strategies
Publication date:
202 p. · Hardback

This book brings together experts from different fields, who used a broad spectrum of methods to investigate the physiological and cellular adaptation of alpine plants from the tree line to the upper limits. Some articles link alpine plant physiology with physiological adaptations observed in polar plants.
Tolerance against often high light intensities (including UV), cold or freezing temperatures, in addition to the need for fast tissue development, flowering, and propagation that is managed by alpine plants are to some extent underrepresented in recent research. This volume considers ice formation and winter conditions in alpine plants; the fate of cryophilic algae and microorganisms; cell structural adaptations; sexual reproduction in high altitudes; the physiology of photosynthesis, antioxidants, metabolites, carbon and nitrogen; and the influences of microclimate (temperatures at the plant level, heat tolerance), UV light, weather and ozone. Further information on life processes in alpine extreme environments may additionally yield new insights into the range of adaptation processes in lowland plants.

 

 

    1. Physiological and ultrastructural changes in alpine plants exposed to high UV and to high ozon

    2. Leaf cell organelle structures as modified by growth conditions and climate in alpine and polar plants

          3. Ice formation and propagation in alpine plants

          4. Dynamic of tissue heat tolerance and thermotolerance of PS II in alpine     plants

          5. Solar radiation and weather conditions of the High Alps

          6. Photosynthesis and antioxidant protection in alpine herbs.

          7.The accumulation of specific metabolites in plants in response to the alpine environment

          8. Interaction of Carbon and Nitrogen metabolisms in alpine plants

          9. From the flower to the seed: dynamics of sexual reproduction in alpine      plants

        10. Plant water relations in alpine winter

        11. Cell structures and physiology of snow and ice algae

        12. Bioclimate temperatures in mountain regions

       13. Cold-adapted microorganisms in alpine soils

Cornelius Lütz is Professor at the Institute of Botany at the University of Innsbruck, Austria. His research focusses on adaptation strategies and cell physiology of higher plants in alpine regions, as well as in Arctis and Antarctis.

This is the first book to cover the aspect of cell physiology in alpine plants;

Thematically related to plant behaviour in a changing environment, this book joins different fields of research, which results in a comprehensive view of molecular and cellular stress adaptation and stress avoidance under the aggravated conditions in high mountain

Includes supplementary material: sn.pub/extras