Resistance to Pests and Diseases Resistance to pests and diseases refers to the genetic ability of plants to defend themselves against insects, pathogens , and microbial infections that reduce crop yield and quality. Through natural breeding or modern genetic engineering , crops can be developed to express protective traits such as insecticidal proteins or enhanced immune responses. Pest- and disease-resistant crops reduce dependence on chemical pesticides, lower production costs, and minimize environmental pollution. These crops also improve yield stability, enhance food security, and support sustainable agriculture by protecting plants throughout their growth cycle while maintaining ecosystem balance. Resistance to pests and diseases, pest-resistant crops, disease-resistant plants, genetic resistance, crop protection, plant immunity, Bt crops, agricultural biotechnology, sustainable agriculture, crop yield stability #ResistanceToPestsAndDiseases #PestResistantCrops #Disease...
Double-Peteled Phenotype The double-petaled phenotype is a floral morphological trait in which flowers develop more than the typical number of petals , often due to the transformation of reproductive organs (such as stamens) into petal-like structures. This phenotype is widely observed in ornamental plants and is highly valued for its enhanced aesthetic appeal. At the genetic level, double-petaling is commonly associated with alterations in floral organ identity genes , particularly MADS-box transcription factors that regulate flower development. Epigenetic modifications , gene mutations , and regulatory pathway interactions can all contribute to this trait . Beyond ornamentation, the double-petaled phenotype serves as an important model for studying floral evolution, developmental genetics , and plant breeding strategies . Double-petaled phenotype, Floral morphology, Flower development, Petal number variation, MADS-box genes, Floral organ identity, Plant developmental genetics, O...