Results 131 to 140 of about 5,677 (173)
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Bemisia tabaci

2014
Bemisia tabaci (Gennadius) (Figure 2E) Aleurodes tabaci Gennadius 1889. Korea Port Interceptions. Intercepted 171 times at Korean ports of entry from Japan, China, Indonesia, Thailand, Spain, Israel, New Zealand, USA and Mexico and on a wide variety of host plants. Diagnosis.
Suh, Soo-Jung, Ji, Jungyoun
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Bemisia tabaci

2010
Published as part of Dooley Iii, John W., Lambrecht, Susan & Honda, Jeffrey, 2010, Eight new state records of aleyrodine whiteflies found in Clark County, Nevada and three newly described taxa (Hemiptera: Aleyrodidae, Aleyrodinae), pp.
Dooley Iii, John W.   +2 more
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Monitoring Bemisia tabaci: A review

Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment, 1986
Abstract Most estimates of whitefly populations relate, according to the purpose of the survey, either to the adults or to the last two larval instars including the so-called “pupae”, these stages being easier to count than eggs or small larvae. Monitoring the adult population is done by visual counts or by catches with suction traps or yellow sticky
B. Ohnesorge, G. Rapp
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Bemisia tabaci Gennadius

2009
Published as part of Malumphy, Christopher, Walsh, Katherine, Suarez, Belen, Collins, Dominique W. & Boonham, Niel, 2009, Morphological and molecular identification of all developmental stages of four whitefly species (Hemiptera: Aleyrodidae) commonly intercepted in quarantine, pp.
Malumphy, Christopher   +4 more
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Prevalence of Wolbachia Infection in Bemisia tabaci

Current Microbiology, 2007
Wolbachia are obligate intracellular bacteria present in reproductive tissues of many arthropod species. It has been reported that few silverleafing populations of Bemisia tabaci were positive for Wolbachia, whereas non-silverleafing populations were more likely infected with Wolbachia and all that infect B. tabaci are Wolbachia belonging to supergroup
Zheng-Xi, Li   +2 more
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Wolbachia Infections of the Whitefly Bemisia tabaci

Current Microbiology, 2003
We report the first systematic survey for the presence of Wolbachia endosymbionts in aphids and whiteflies, particularly different populations and biotypes of Bemisia tabaci. Additional agriculturally important species included were predator species, leafhoppers, and lepidopterans.
Androniki, Nirgianaki   +9 more
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Bemisia tabaci population density dependent on tomato rootstock

Acta Horticulturae, 2020
The tobacco whitefly Bemisia tabaci is among the most damaging pests in greenhouse production of tomatoes. Insecticide resistance management of B. tabaci requires continuous improvement of non-chemical methods for pest control. The goal of this study was to test the effects of scion and rootstock cultivars on the population densities of B. tabaci adult
Goreta Ban, Smiljana   +3 more
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Bemisia tabaci nomenclature: lessons learned

Pest Management Science, 2014
AbstractBACKGROUNDThe nomenclature used within the whitefly research community for different putative species within Bemisia tabaci (sensu Russell) remains highly variable and confused. This was evident by the many different naming schemes researchers were using in their presentations at the 1st International Whitefly Symposium in Kolymbari, Crete ...
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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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Bemisia tabaci in Croatia

EPPO Bulletin, 2002
Bemisia tabaci was reported for the first time in the Mediterranean part of Croatia in 2000. It was found in glasshouses in the agricultural area between the towns of Trogir and Omis, on the following crops: Euphorbia pulcherrima, Thunbergia grandiflora, Cucumis sativus (cucumber), Solanum melongena (aubergine), Phaseolus spp.
T. Masten, M. Simala
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