Plants and herbivores have co-evolved in their natural habitats for about 350 million years, but since the domestication of crops, plant resistance against insects has taken a different turn. With the onset of monoculture-driven modern agriculture, selective pressure on insects to overcome resistances has dramatically increased. Therefore plant breeders have resorted to high-tech tools to continuously create new insect-resistant crops. Efforts in the past 30 years have resulted in elucidation of mechanisms of many effective plant defenses against insect herbivores. Here, we critically appraise these efforts and – with a focus on sap-sucking insects – discuss how these findings have contributed to herbivore-resistant crops. Moreover, in this review we try to assess where future challenges and opportunities lay ahead. Of particular importance will be a mandatory reduction in systemic pesticide usage and thus a greater reliance on alternative methods, such as improved plant genetics for plant resistance to insect herbivores.
Resistance to sap-sucking insects in modern-day agriculture
Published 2013 in Frontiers in Plant Science
ABSTRACT
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- Publication year
2013
- Venue
Frontiers in Plant Science
- Publication date
2013-06-27
- Fields of study
Agricultural and Food Sciences, Medicine, Biology
- Identifiers
- External record
- Source metadata
Semantic Scholar, PubMed
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