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Authors: Yeshwant Ramchandra Mehta
Publish Date: 2014
Volume: , Issue: , Pages: 1-16
Abstract
Wheat is staple food for the major part of the world’s population Approximately 630 million tons of wheat are produced annually roughly half of it in developing countries Peña 2007 Singh et al 2011 It is especially important in India in the USA in Europe and in the Latin and centralAmerican countries including Argentina Brazil Bolivia Chile Mexico Paraguay and Uruguay Wheat production in the USA in 2011 was around 344 million tons harvested from 186 million hectares Savary et al 2012 Annual wheat production in the Latin American region for example used to be rather low compared to that in some technologically advanced countries and remained so for some years 15 and 20 × 106 t However as in other countries wheat productivity in this region has gradually increased during the past 20 years reaching an average of over 20–35 t/ha depending upon the country This significant increase in wheat yield is mainly due to the introduction of high yielding cultivars and improvements in integrated disease management practices which are dealt with in the following chapters followed by individual descriptions of some important wheat diseases that cause substantial yield losses in different wheat growing areas of the world Besides several diseases the reoccurrence of scab the emergence of an aggressive race of stem rust Ug99 and the spread of a relatively new disease—the Pyricularia blast attacking cereals other than rice are causing serious threats to wheat cultivation in much of the world Vurro et al 2012 Ralph et al 2012
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