{"title":"社论-应用植物学杂志100年","authors":"H. Riegler, J. Papenbrock","doi":"10.5073/JABFQ.2019.092.026","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"This year we want to celebrate the 100th birthday of our journal, which was first published as Angewandte Botanik (= Applied Botany) in 1919. \nIt started as journal for members of the “Vereinigung fur Angewandte Botanik (German Society for Applied Botany)” only. On a monthly basis, it delivered the newest research results in the field of applied botany as well as short communications, literature reviews and reports from scientific meetings to the German speaking research community. After a short publication hiatus in the 1940ies, society members continued to report their findings, quickly exhausting the available print pages. Throughout the years, English titles and summaries where added, making the journal accessible for a wider, non-German speaking audience. The final step into the international research community was the opening of the journal for authors, who were not society members in the 1980ies. In 2004, the “Deutsche Gesellschaft fur Qualitatsforschung - Pflanzliche Lebensmittel (German Society for Quality Research in Plant Foods)” joined the journal due to partial overlap in their research focus, thus, making it the Journal of Applied Botany and Food Quality as we know it today. The latest change happened in 2013, with the switch from a subscription based print journal to an online-only gold open access journal. This once again broadened the readership and gained the attention of even more international researchers, which nowadays make up the majority of our journal authors. \nThe first article in \"Angewandte Botanik\" published in 1919 was submitted by Otto Appel, a phytopathologist well known for his discoveries on bacterial and fungal diseases of crops such as potato and cereals. His work ranged from fundamental research to applied research and reflected in his long-term membership in the board of the Association for Applied Botany. In the first contribution of this special jubilee section Hartwig Schulz and Heike Riegler report about \"Otto Appel and his contributions to food quality and safety at the beginning of the 20th century\" and give insights into the major challenges in phytopathology at the early years of the 20th century and discoveries by Otto Appel in this field. Maik Kleinwachter and Dirk Selmar prepared a contribution about \"Modern Applied Botany - Changes in the perception of applied botanists to themselves and others during the last century. Three recent examples of the scientific potential of this field\". They give a short outline on the history of applied research in plant biology in Germany and illustrate the relevance of modern Applied Botany in three relevant post-harvest processes. They state that interdisciplinary work and intensive cooperation with growers and producers is an integral part of developing feasible and economically acceptable solutions that can be successfully transferred into practice. The major challenge in Applied Botany today is the implementation of new concepts and ideas into product-related research. In the third article in the special section Claudia Bahmann, Thomas Rinas, Nicolas Niemenak, Elsa Hegmann, Bernward Bisping, David Seigler and Reinhard Lieberei describe how \"Cacao seed tests controls transport processes during germination and fermentation-like incubation\". The contribution of Muna Ali Abdalla and Karl H. Muhling leads us to \"Plant-derived sulfur containing natural products produced as a response to biotic and abiotic stresses. A review of their structural diversity and medicinal importance\" and reveals the diversity in structure and function of secondary compounds in plants. In the article written by Wolfgang Kreis \"Exploiting plant cell culture for natural product formation\" we get insights into the high expectations researchers and industry had on the exploitation of plant cell cultures from a historical and personal point of view. Imke Hutter and Carolin Schneider report on the current state of \"Commercial micropropagation in Germany\" from the applied site. In an interdisciplinary project, Jan Philipp Schuchardt, Andreas Hahn, Theresa Greupner, Paulina Wasserfurth, Maria Rosales-Lopez, Johann Hornbacher and Jutta Papenbrock work on different aspects concerning \"Watercress – cultivation methods and health effects\". Georg Langenkamper and Christian Zorb submit an article about \"Modern aspects of wheat grain storage proteins\". Finally, on the interaction of plants with microorganisms, in this case fungi, is shed light on by Oluwatosin Abdulsalam, Erika Kothe and Katrin Krause in \"The parasitic-neutral-mutual continuum of plant-fungal interactions\".","PeriodicalId":56276,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Applied Botany and Food Quality-Angewandte Botanik","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":1.2000,"publicationDate":"2019-09-11","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Editorial - 100 years Journal of Applied Botany\",\"authors\":\"H. Riegler, J. Papenbrock\",\"doi\":\"10.5073/JABFQ.2019.092.026\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"This year we want to celebrate the 100th birthday of our journal, which was first published as Angewandte Botanik (= Applied Botany) in 1919. \\nIt started as journal for members of the “Vereinigung fur Angewandte Botanik (German Society for Applied Botany)” only. On a monthly basis, it delivered the newest research results in the field of applied botany as well as short communications, literature reviews and reports from scientific meetings to the German speaking research community. After a short publication hiatus in the 1940ies, society members continued to report their findings, quickly exhausting the available print pages. Throughout the years, English titles and summaries where added, making the journal accessible for a wider, non-German speaking audience. The final step into the international research community was the opening of the journal for authors, who were not society members in the 1980ies. In 2004, the “Deutsche Gesellschaft fur Qualitatsforschung - Pflanzliche Lebensmittel (German Society for Quality Research in Plant Foods)” joined the journal due to partial overlap in their research focus, thus, making it the Journal of Applied Botany and Food Quality as we know it today. The latest change happened in 2013, with the switch from a subscription based print journal to an online-only gold open access journal. This once again broadened the readership and gained the attention of even more international researchers, which nowadays make up the majority of our journal authors. \\nThe first article in \\\"Angewandte Botanik\\\" published in 1919 was submitted by Otto Appel, a phytopathologist well known for his discoveries on bacterial and fungal diseases of crops such as potato and cereals. His work ranged from fundamental research to applied research and reflected in his long-term membership in the board of the Association for Applied Botany. In the first contribution of this special jubilee section Hartwig Schulz and Heike Riegler report about \\\"Otto Appel and his contributions to food quality and safety at the beginning of the 20th century\\\" and give insights into the major challenges in phytopathology at the early years of the 20th century and discoveries by Otto Appel in this field. Maik Kleinwachter and Dirk Selmar prepared a contribution about \\\"Modern Applied Botany - Changes in the perception of applied botanists to themselves and others during the last century. Three recent examples of the scientific potential of this field\\\". They give a short outline on the history of applied research in plant biology in Germany and illustrate the relevance of modern Applied Botany in three relevant post-harvest processes. They state that interdisciplinary work and intensive cooperation with growers and producers is an integral part of developing feasible and economically acceptable solutions that can be successfully transferred into practice. The major challenge in Applied Botany today is the implementation of new concepts and ideas into product-related research. In the third article in the special section Claudia Bahmann, Thomas Rinas, Nicolas Niemenak, Elsa Hegmann, Bernward Bisping, David Seigler and Reinhard Lieberei describe how \\\"Cacao seed tests controls transport processes during germination and fermentation-like incubation\\\". The contribution of Muna Ali Abdalla and Karl H. Muhling leads us to \\\"Plant-derived sulfur containing natural products produced as a response to biotic and abiotic stresses. A review of their structural diversity and medicinal importance\\\" and reveals the diversity in structure and function of secondary compounds in plants. In the article written by Wolfgang Kreis \\\"Exploiting plant cell culture for natural product formation\\\" we get insights into the high expectations researchers and industry had on the exploitation of plant cell cultures from a historical and personal point of view. Imke Hutter and Carolin Schneider report on the current state of \\\"Commercial micropropagation in Germany\\\" from the applied site. In an interdisciplinary project, Jan Philipp Schuchardt, Andreas Hahn, Theresa Greupner, Paulina Wasserfurth, Maria Rosales-Lopez, Johann Hornbacher and Jutta Papenbrock work on different aspects concerning \\\"Watercress – cultivation methods and health effects\\\". Georg Langenkamper and Christian Zorb submit an article about \\\"Modern aspects of wheat grain storage proteins\\\". 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引用次数: 0
摘要
今年我们要庆祝我们的期刊100岁生日,该杂志于1919年首次出版,名为《应用植物学》。它最初只是德国应用植物学学会(Vereinigung fur Angewandte Botanik)成员的期刊。它每月向德语研究界提供应用植物学领域的最新研究成果,以及简短的通讯、文献评论和科学会议报告。在20世纪40年代短暂的出版中断之后,协会成员继续报告他们的发现,很快耗尽了可用的印刷页面。多年来,增加了英文标题和摘要,使更多的非德语读者可以访问该期刊。进入国际研究界的最后一步是,在20世纪80年代,该杂志面向非学会成员的作者开放。2004年,德国植物性食品质量研究协会(Deutsche Gesellschaft fur Qualitatsforschung - Pflanzliche Lebensmittel)由于其研究重点部分重叠而加入该杂志,从而使其成为我们今天所知的《应用植物学与食品质量杂志》。最近的一次变化发生在2013年,从基于订阅的纸质期刊转变为仅限在线的黄金开放获取期刊。这再次扩大了读者群,并获得了更多国际研究人员的关注,这些研究人员现在构成了我们期刊作者的大多数。1919年,奥托·阿佩尔(Otto Appel)在《Angewandte Botanik》上发表了第一篇文章,他是一位植物病理学家,因发现马铃薯和谷物等作物的细菌和真菌疾病而闻名。他的工作范围从基础研究到应用研究,并反映在他长期担任应用植物学协会董事会成员。Hartwig Schulz和Heike Riegler在这个特别的周年纪念部分的第一篇文章中报道了“Otto Appel和他在20世纪初对食品质量和安全的贡献”,并对20世纪初植物病理学的主要挑战和Otto Appel在该领域的发现进行了深入的了解。Maik Kleinwachter和Dirk Selmar准备了一篇关于“现代应用植物学——上个世纪应用植物学家对自己和他人的看法的变化”的文章。这一领域的科学潜力的三个最近的例子。他们简要概述了德国植物生物学应用研究的历史,并说明了现代应用植物学在三个相关的收获后过程中的相关性。他们指出,跨学科的工作和与种植者和生产者的密切合作是制定可行和经济上可接受的解决办法的一个组成部分,这些办法可以成功地转化为实践。应用植物学目前面临的主要挑战是将新概念和新想法应用到产品相关研究中。在特殊部分的第三篇文章中,Claudia Bahmann、Thomas Rinas、Nicolas Niemenak、Elsa Hegmann、Bernward Bisping、David Seigler和Reinhard Lieberei描述了“可可豆种子测试如何控制发芽和发酵样孵化过程中的运输过程”。穆纳·阿里·阿卜杜拉(Muna Ali Abdalla)和卡尔·h·穆林(Karl H. Muhling)的贡献使我们发现了“植物衍生的含硫天然产物是对生物和非生物胁迫的反应。综述了植物次生化合物的结构多样性和药用价值,揭示了植物次生化合物在结构和功能上的多样性。在Wolfgang Kreis撰写的文章“利用植物细胞培养形成天然产物”中,我们从历史和个人的角度了解了研究人员和工业界对植物细胞培养开发的高期望。Imke Hutter和Carolin Schneider从应用现场报道了“德国商业微繁殖”的现状。在一个跨学科项目中,Jan Philipp Schuchardt, Andreas Hahn, Theresa Greupner, Paulina Wasserfurth, Maria Rosales-Lopez, Johann Hornbacher和Jutta Papenbrock在“豆科植物-种植方法和健康影响”的不同方面进行了研究。Georg Langenkamper和Christian Zorb提交了一篇关于“小麦谷物储存蛋白质的现代方面”的文章。最后,Oluwatosin Abdulsalam, Erika Kothe和Katrin Krause在“植物-真菌相互作用的寄生-中性-相互连续体”中阐明了植物与微生物的相互作用,在这种情况下是真菌。
This year we want to celebrate the 100th birthday of our journal, which was first published as Angewandte Botanik (= Applied Botany) in 1919.
It started as journal for members of the “Vereinigung fur Angewandte Botanik (German Society for Applied Botany)” only. On a monthly basis, it delivered the newest research results in the field of applied botany as well as short communications, literature reviews and reports from scientific meetings to the German speaking research community. After a short publication hiatus in the 1940ies, society members continued to report their findings, quickly exhausting the available print pages. Throughout the years, English titles and summaries where added, making the journal accessible for a wider, non-German speaking audience. The final step into the international research community was the opening of the journal for authors, who were not society members in the 1980ies. In 2004, the “Deutsche Gesellschaft fur Qualitatsforschung - Pflanzliche Lebensmittel (German Society for Quality Research in Plant Foods)” joined the journal due to partial overlap in their research focus, thus, making it the Journal of Applied Botany and Food Quality as we know it today. The latest change happened in 2013, with the switch from a subscription based print journal to an online-only gold open access journal. This once again broadened the readership and gained the attention of even more international researchers, which nowadays make up the majority of our journal authors.
The first article in "Angewandte Botanik" published in 1919 was submitted by Otto Appel, a phytopathologist well known for his discoveries on bacterial and fungal diseases of crops such as potato and cereals. His work ranged from fundamental research to applied research and reflected in his long-term membership in the board of the Association for Applied Botany. In the first contribution of this special jubilee section Hartwig Schulz and Heike Riegler report about "Otto Appel and his contributions to food quality and safety at the beginning of the 20th century" and give insights into the major challenges in phytopathology at the early years of the 20th century and discoveries by Otto Appel in this field. Maik Kleinwachter and Dirk Selmar prepared a contribution about "Modern Applied Botany - Changes in the perception of applied botanists to themselves and others during the last century. Three recent examples of the scientific potential of this field". They give a short outline on the history of applied research in plant biology in Germany and illustrate the relevance of modern Applied Botany in three relevant post-harvest processes. They state that interdisciplinary work and intensive cooperation with growers and producers is an integral part of developing feasible and economically acceptable solutions that can be successfully transferred into practice. The major challenge in Applied Botany today is the implementation of new concepts and ideas into product-related research. In the third article in the special section Claudia Bahmann, Thomas Rinas, Nicolas Niemenak, Elsa Hegmann, Bernward Bisping, David Seigler and Reinhard Lieberei describe how "Cacao seed tests controls transport processes during germination and fermentation-like incubation". The contribution of Muna Ali Abdalla and Karl H. Muhling leads us to "Plant-derived sulfur containing natural products produced as a response to biotic and abiotic stresses. A review of their structural diversity and medicinal importance" and reveals the diversity in structure and function of secondary compounds in plants. In the article written by Wolfgang Kreis "Exploiting plant cell culture for natural product formation" we get insights into the high expectations researchers and industry had on the exploitation of plant cell cultures from a historical and personal point of view. Imke Hutter and Carolin Schneider report on the current state of "Commercial micropropagation in Germany" from the applied site. In an interdisciplinary project, Jan Philipp Schuchardt, Andreas Hahn, Theresa Greupner, Paulina Wasserfurth, Maria Rosales-Lopez, Johann Hornbacher and Jutta Papenbrock work on different aspects concerning "Watercress – cultivation methods and health effects". Georg Langenkamper and Christian Zorb submit an article about "Modern aspects of wheat grain storage proteins". Finally, on the interaction of plants with microorganisms, in this case fungi, is shed light on by Oluwatosin Abdulsalam, Erika Kothe and Katrin Krause in "The parasitic-neutral-mutual continuum of plant-fungal interactions".
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Applied Botany and Food Quality is the Open Access journal of the German Society for Quality Research on Plant Foods and the Section Applied Botany of the German Botanical Society. It provides a platform for scientists to disseminate recent results of applied plant research in plant physiology and plant ecology, plant biotechnology, plant breeding and cultivation, phytomedicine, plant nutrition, plant stress and resistance, plant microbiology, plant analysis (including -omics techniques), and plant food chemistry. The articles have a clear focus on botanical and plant quality aspects and contain new and innovative information based on state-of-the-art methodologies.