Food security, crop protection, biodiversity, and human and environmental health are among the main needs and concerns of society. Modern biotechnology and life sciences represent a constantly evolving area that is key for the rational use of natural resources – resources that in turn are indispensable for societal development.
This book features the outcomes of the IV International Biotechnology and Biodiversity Congress, held in Guayaquil, Ecuador, 2018. It includes extensive reviews of the trends in agricultural and forestry biotechnology, molecules and materials biodiscovery, ethnomedicine, environmental impact and bioindustry research, describing many of these topics from the Latin America perspective and showing how the biodiversity and ancient knowledge of these countries are vital for worldwide sustainable development.
Genetically modified organisms (GMOs) impact and current status in Latin
America: technological sovereignty or dependence?.- New biotechnology
promising approaches for disease control on bananas and plantains.-
Complementation of bananas conventional breeding programs through
biotechnological genetic improvement.- The stress as inducer of heritable
changes in micropropagated banana: the hypothesis of cytokinin accumulation.-
Somatic embryogenesis for clonal propagation and associated molecular studies
in cacao (Theobroma cacao L.).- Use of biotechnology in Forestry breeding
programs for natural resources and biodiversity conservation; Creating super
trees for the future.- Stress modulation in Pinus spp. Somatic embryogenesis
as model for climate change mitigation; Stress is not always a problem.- A
Protective Role for Accumulated Dry Matter Reserves in Seeds During
Desiccation: Implications for Conservation.- Biodiversity in Ecuador and its
immense potential for agricultural pest control.- Native biodiversity: a
strategic resource to accelerate bioeconomy development in Latin America and
the Caribbean.- Low cost crop waste biosorbent technology for removing toxic
and pollutants from wastewater.- The status of plant and plant-microbe
interactions related to medicinal agents.- Bringing new function to packaging
materials by agricultural byproducts.- Use of banana crop wastes to develop
products in the aquaculture and plastic sectors.- Use of agroindustrial
biomass for biofuels, enzymes discovery and production.- Temperature Profiles
during the Fermentation of Cacao Nacional to understand chocolate quality
.- Ethno Phytopharmacology. Product validation process based on traditional
knowledge of medicinal plants.- Biological control as a key tool for the
management of invasive species in Latin America and the Caribbean.- Current
research on Andean fruit crop diseases.- Biotechnological tools for the
development of Foc TR4-resistant or tolerant Musa spp. Cultivars.- Integrated
pest management of whitefly crop-free periods can reduce the Begomovirus
transmission in tomato
Pablo Chong has a Masters degree in Biotechnology from Escuela Superior Politécnica del Litoral (EPSOL), Ecuador and a PhD degree in Biotechnology from Wageningen University, the Netherlands. He has eighteen years experience in the field of biotechnology, molecular biology and microbiology. His research focuses on fungi molecular mechanisms to resist systemic fungicides, and his work has led to publications on the discovery of a new resistance mechanism in Pseudocercospora fijiensis. Since 2016, he has worked as an invited Biology Professor at the Life Science Faculty at ESPOL University, and Head Research Coordinator of the molecular biology and plant tissue culture departments at CIBE-ESPOL.
David Newman has an analytical chemistry (ARIC) background. He holds an MSc in Synthetic Organic Chemistry and a doctorate in Microbial Chemistry. His career spans over 50 years: he spent 25 years working on the search for novel antibiotics (bothantibacterial and antifungal) in the US pharmaceutical industry. The other 25 years were spent working at the US National Cancer Institute, where he was initially responsible for microbial and marine collection programs looking for leads to antitumor drugs. During this time, he was also responsible for the sourcing of pure halichondrin B, an agent from a deep-water sponge, and he received the NIH Award of Merit for his research leading to the successful introduction of Halaven®.
Douglas André Steinmacher, PhD, has twenty years experience in the field of plant tissue culture, especially somatic embryogenesis. He is an agronomist (2002) with an MSc in Plant Genetic Resources from the Federal University of Santa Catarina (UFSC 2005) and a PhD in Applied Botany from the University of Hamburg, Germany (2010). He was a member of the board of directors of the Germany Society for Plant Tissue Culture (ADIVK) (2009-2010), and since 2014 has been head of the VivetechAgrosciences company. His interests include plant micropropagation, somatic embryogenesis, plant bioreactors, temporary immersion systems, plant somaclonal variation and plant physiology.