Biology and Biotechnology of Environmental Stress Tolerance in Plants, Volume 3: Sustainable Approaches for
Enhan
Roychoudhury (Ed.)
© 202
ylor & Francis)
with CRC Press (Ta
nmental Stress Tole
ss, Inc
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cing Enviro
4 Apple A
demic Pre
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. Co-published
CHAPTER 6
Plant Breeding Approaches in
Developing Stress Tolerance
SAMI UL-ALLAH,1* ASAD AZEEM,1 AHMAD SHER,1 MUHAMMAD IJAZ,1
ABDUL SATTAR,1 MUHAMMAD NAEEM,2 and IMRAN ULLAH3
1College of Agriculture, Bahauddin Zakariya University,
Bahadur Sub-Campus Layyah, Pakistan
2Department of Plant Breeding and Genetics, UCA&ES,
The Islamia University of Bahawalpur, Pakistan
3Department of Plant Breeding and Genetics, University of Agriculture,
Faisalabad, Pakistan
*Corresponding author. E-mail: [email protected]
ABSTRACT
Biotic and abiotic stresses are major hurdles to maximize crop produc
tion, and in climate change scenarios, the threat of these stresses is even
high. Major abiotic stresses include salinity, drought, temperature, and
heavy metal and major biotic stresses include plant diseases and insect-
pest attacks. These stresses have resulted in severe crop losses on a global
scale. Scientists have developed various techniques to alleviate the effect of
these stresses for optimum crop production, like agronomic management,
soil amendments, use of microorganisms, use of pesticides, integrated pest
and disease management, and development of tolerant genotypes. From all
the above-mentioned techniques, the development of tolerant genotypes is
the most sustainable technique that does not require any input except the
seed of tolerant genotype. There are two major types of breeding techniques