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Allelopathy:How Plants Suppress other Plants
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The term allelopathy is from the Greek-derived compounds allelo and pathy (meaning "mutual harm" or "suffering") and was first used in 1937 by Austrian scientist Hans Molisch in the book Der Einfluss einer Pflanze auf die andere - Allelopathie (The Effect of Plants on Each Other) published in German (Willis, 2010).
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- Chang-Hung, Chou (2006). “Introduction to allelopathy”, 2006, Part 1, 1-9.
- Fraenkel, Gottfried S. (1959). “The raison d’Etre of secondary plant substances”, Science, 129 (3361).
- Rice, Elroy Leon (1984). Allelopathy, (1st Ed., November 1974 by the same editor) (IInd Ed.), Academic Press, pp. 422 p. ISBN 978-0-12-587058-0
- Roger, Manuel Joaquín Reigosa, Reigosa, Manuel J.,Pedrol, Nuria and González, Luís (2006). Allelopathy: a physiological process with ecological implications, Springer, p. 1, ISBN 14020-4279-5
- Sheeja B.D. (1993). Allelopathic effects of Eupatorium odoratum L. and Lantana camara,L. on four major crops. M. Phil dissertation, Manonmaniam Sundaranar University, Tirunelveli.
- Stamp, Nancy (2003). “Out of the quagmire of plant defense hypotheses”, The Quarterly Review of Biology 78 (1): 23–55.
- Willis, Rick J. (2007). “The History of Allelopathy”, Springer: 3, ISBN 1-4020-4092-X, retrieved 2009-08-12.
- Willis, R. J. (2010). The History of Allelopathy. Dordrecht, The Netherlands: Springer.
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