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Investigation of Trap Plants to Attract Bemisia tabaci (Hemiptera: Aleyrodidae) (Hemiptera: Aleyrodidae)

Korean Journal of Applied Entomology, 2014
The number of Bemisia tabaci adults attracted to horseweed, thistle, red bean, cucumber, and tomato plants, as measured by the number stuck to yellow sticky traps, was investigated in a polyvinyl greenhouse for growing tomatoes using organic methods. The number was highest on cucumber plants in the early days of B.
Yong-Seok Choi   +6 more
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Bibliography of Aleyrodidae.

1960
Contributions to Entomology = Beiträge zur Entomologie, Bd. 10 Nr. 3-4 (1960)
Trehan, K. N., Butani, Dhamo K.
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Nomenclatorial note on Bernaeinae (Hemiptera, Sternorrhyncha, Aleyrodidae)

Zootaxa, 2020
The Bernaeinae, currently regarded as a subfamily of Aleyrodidae (Szwedo & Drohojowska 2016, Drohojowska et al. 2019), is the only extinct subfamily of whiteflies with a fossil record from the Callovian (late Middle Jurassic) to Cenomanian (early Upper Cretaceous).
DMITRY E. SHCHERBAKOV   +2 more
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Transmission by Whiteflies (Aleyrodidae)

1998
Whitefly-transmitted viruses, belonging to the family Geminiviridae (subgroup III Geminivirus),cause serious diseases in many crops, such as bean, cassava, cotton, tobacco and tomato. Their vector is Bemisia tabaci, a whitefly species commonly occurring in the tropics and subtropics.
Jeanne Dijkstra, Cees P. de Jager
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Bemisia tabaci (Homoptera: Aleyrodidae) Biotypes in India

Journal of Economic Entomology, 2003
Host plant performance, esterase, and virus transmission tests revealed cassava-strain and sweetpotato-strain populations of whitefly Bemisia tabaci (Gennadius) biotypes in India. Individuals from the sweetpotato-reared population did not breed on cassava, Manihot esculenta Crantz, and the cassava-strain-reared individuals failed to develop on ...
V S, Lisha   +3 more
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Whiteflies (Hemiptera: Aleyrodidae) of India

2019
Whiteflies are an economically important group of insects infesting a wide range of host plants. The whitefly egg has a stalk or pedicel at one end, with which it attaches itself to the leaf. Some polyphagous whitefly species vary in their puparia depending on the host plant cuticle on which they develop, and this has caused a considerable amount of ...
R. Sundararaj   +3 more
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Predators of citrus blackfly [Hom.: Aleyrodidae]

Entomophaga, 1979
A 2-year survey of known whitefly predators was conducted from winter 1976 to winter 1978 in Broward County, Florida. Also, the impact of predators on citrus blackfly populations was measured under field conditions using lifetable data and predator exclusion data.
R. Cherry, R. V. Dowell
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The status ofBemisia tabaci (Hom.: Aleyrodidae),Trialeurodes vaporariorum (Hom.: Aleyrodidae) and their natural enemies in Crete

Entomophaga, 1993
The non «B» biotype ofBemisia tabaci (Gennadius) is recorded for the first time in Crete in 1992, in the north east and south east of the island.Trialeurodes vaporariorum (Westwood) is the predominant whitefly on plants in the north and west of the island. Three surveys of Crete were made in 1992 and 1993 for natural enemies ofB.
A. A. Kirk   +3 more
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Bibliography of Aleyrodidae II.

1970
Trehan and Butani (1960) published a comprehensive bibliography listing 998 references of the Aleyrodidae. This is a supplement to that treatise.
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Biosystematics of Aleyrodidae (Homoptera: Insecta)

Proceedings: Animal Sciences, 1987
The sarcity of positively associated stages of adults of both sexes and the remarkably little variation shown by the adults of a very few species studied have naturally led to the recognition of the so-called pupal cases, the exuviae of the IV instar nymphs in the matter of generic and specific classification of the aleyrodids—a rather unusual ...
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