The Scientific World Journal

Plant Abio-Stress and Bioresources Utilization for Sustainable Development


Publishing date
07 Nov 2014
Status
Published
Submission deadline
20 Jun 2014

Lead Editor

1Institute of Life Sciences, Qingdao University of Science and Technology, Zhengzhou Road 53, Qingdao, Shandong 266042, China

2Department of Plant Physiology, Slovak Agricultural University in Nitra, Trieda Andreja Hlinku 2, 949 01 Nitra, Slovakia

3Cancer and Genetics Research Complex, University of Florida, 2033 Mowry Road, Room 438,Gainesville, FL 32610, USA

4College of Agronomy and Plant Protection, Qingdao Agricultural University, Qingdao, Shandong 266109, China

5Yantai Institute of Coastal Zone Research (YIC), Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS), Yantai, Shandong 264003,China


Plant Abio-Stress and Bioresources Utilization for Sustainable Development

Description

Major challenges in the current world are to know the physiological mechanisms for plants responding to abiotic stresses such as salt, heat, drought, cold, and UV-B, which have been extensively investigated under increasing global climate change. How to efficiently use bioresources and protect and construct eco-environment for sustainable development is the greatest challenge. As known, plants can provide human beings with renewable energy, food, and materials and are the base for sustainable development in different forms around the world. The other related issues are bioresources efficient utilization and eco-environmental construction. So, these major global challenges are the precondition of our sustainable survival.

Plants have evolved different mechanisms for adapting themselves to different stresses during long-term natural evolution and domestic pressure, which at least include molecular, biochemical, physiological, cellular, organ, tissue, anatomy, individual, and ecological scales. The physiological level is very important as it is the key for farmers to fertilize and manage crops. More recent progress related to molecular biology and metabolism and bioresources and eco-environment has also taken place for the past 20 years. To summarize this topic, we organize this topical issue in the invitation of The Scientific World Journal. In this special issue, the latest advancement in plant abio-stress biology, bioresources utilization, and eco-environment protection and construction will be highlighted. We invite authors to contribute original as well as review articles. Potential topics include, but are not limited to:

  • Plant abio-stress—molecular, biochemistry, physiology, ecology, biotechnology, and others
  • Bioresources utilization with focus on methods development and scientific disciplines–soils, salt plants, and their residue (e.g., biocarbon)
  • Eco-environmental construction-vegetation succession, soil quality improvement and management, soil pollution and remediation by different methodologies, and sustainable agriculture

Before submission authors should carefully read over the journal’s Author Guidelines, which are located at http://www.hindawi.com/journals/tswj/guidelines/. Prospective authors should submit an electronic copy of their complete manuscript through the journal Manuscript Tracking System at http://mts.hindawi.com/submit/journals/tswj/biotechnology/abios/ according to the following timetable:


Articles

  • Special Issue
  • - Volume 2014
  • - Article ID 843764
  • - Research Article

Hydrogen Peroxide Is Involved in Salicylic Acid-Elicited Rosmarinic Acid Production in Salvia miltiorrhiza Cell Cultures

Wenfang Hao | Hongbo Guo | ... | Juane Dong
  • Special Issue
  • - Volume 2014
  • - Article ID 437684
  • - Review Article

A Meta-Analysis of the Bacterial and Archaeal Diversity Observed in Wetland Soils

Xiaofei Lv | Junbao Yu | ... | Huifeng Wu
  • Special Issue
  • - Volume 2014
  • - Article ID 487961
  • - Research Article

Distribution Characteristic of Soil Organic Carbon Fraction in Different Types of Wetland in Hongze Lake of China

Yan Lu | Hongwen Xu
  • Special Issue
  • - Volume 2014
  • - Article ID 912083
  • - Research Article

Soil Phosphorus Forms and Profile Distributions in the Tidal River Network Region in the Yellow River Delta Estuary

Junbao Yu | Fanzhu Qu | ... | Baohua Xie
  • Special Issue
  • - Volume 2014
  • - Article ID 765907
  • - Research Article

Soil Characteristic Comparison of Fenced and Grazed Riparian Floodplain Wetlands in the Typical Steppe Region of the Inner Mongolian Plateau, China

Lixin Wang | Huamin Liu | ... | Cunzhu Liang
  • Special Issue
  • - Volume 2014
  • - Article ID 412183
  • - Research Article

Effects of Different Vegetation Zones on CH4 and N2O Emissions in Coastal Wetlands: A Model Case Study

Yuhong Liu | Lixin Wang | ... | Shuqing An
  • Special Issue
  • - Volume 2014
  • - Article ID 517020
  • - Research Article

Multivariate-Statistical Assessment of Heavy Metals for Agricultural Soils in Northern China

Pingguo Yang | Miao Yang | ... | Hongbo Shao
  • Special Issue
  • - Volume 2014
  • - Article ID 821781
  • - Research Article

Effects of Urbanization Expansion on Landscape Pattern and Region Ecological Risk in Chinese Coastal City: A Case Study of Yantai City

Di Zhou | Ping Shi | ... | Junbao Yu
  • Special Issue
  • - Volume 2014
  • - Article ID 949213
  • - Research Article

Wet and Dry Atmospheric Depositions of Inorganic Nitrogen during Plant Growing Season in the Coastal Zone of Yellow River Delta

Junbao Yu | Kai Ning | ... | Yongjun Gao
  • Special Issue
  • - Volume 2014
  • - Article ID 952051
  • - Research Article

Ecological Effects of Roads on the Plant Diversity of Coastal Wetland in the Yellow River Delta

Yunzhao Li | Junbao Yu | ... | Chao Zhan
The Scientific World Journal
 Journal metrics
See full report
Acceptance rate15%
Submission to final decision115 days
Acceptance to publication14 days
CiteScore3.900
Journal Citation Indicator-
Impact Factor-
 Submit Evaluate your manuscript with the free Manuscript Language Checker

We have begun to integrate the 200+ Hindawi journals into Wiley’s journal portfolio. You can find out more about how this benefits our journal communities on our FAQ.