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Bemisia tabaci (tobacco whitefly).
2021Abstract The Bemisia tabaci complex is polyphagous and now attacks many crops, but without significant impact on land use. Any effects on biodiversity would result indirectly from an increased use of insecticides against this pest.
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The Whitefly Bemisia tabaci (Gennadius)
2017The whitefly Bemisia tabaci (Gennadius) is a species complex containing at least 35 morphologically indistinguishable cryptic species. Some members of the complex are pests of agricultural and horticultural crops in temperate and tropical regions. During the past 20 years, two species of the complex, Middle East-Asia Minor 1 (hereafter MEAM1) and ...
Xiaowei Wang, Nianwan Yang
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Management of Bemisia tabaci Whiteflies
2011This review presents and discusses the merits of the methodologies available for implementing integrated pest management (IPM) of B. tabaci populations: namely, chemical control with selective insecticides, biological control, crop plant resistance and physical/mechanical methods.
A. Rami Horowitz +2 more
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Chemical control of Bemisia tabaci
Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment, 1986Abstract The sweetpotato whitefly, Bemisia tabaci Genn., vector of many plant viral diseases, remains a serious threat to the production of different economic crops in various countries unless practical control methods for the diseases or the vector are achieved.
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Bemisia tabaci: A Statement of Species Status
Annual Review of Entomology, 2011Bemisia tabaci has long been considered a complex species. It rose to global prominence in the 1980s owing to the global invasion by the commonly named B biotype. Since then, the concomitant eruption of a group of plant viruses known as begomoviruses has created considerable management problems in many countries.
De Barro, Paul J. +3 more
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Engineering Dual Begomovirus- Bemisia tabaci Resistance in Plants
Trends in Plant Science, 2017The whitefly Bemisia tabaci is an important pest of many economically important crops and the vector of begomoviruses (family Geminiviridae). Recently, the expression of insecticidal proteins and/or toxins or double-stranded (ds)RNA homologous to B. tabaci genes has been demonstrated to provide the plant with protection against B.
Syed-Shan-e-Ali, Zaïdi +2 more
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Oogenesis in the Bemisia tabaci MEAM1 species complex
Micron, 2016The whitefly Bemisia tabaci MEAM1 species complex has invaded several parts of the world in the past 30 years and replaced native whitefly populations in the invaded regions, including certain areas of China. One of the possible reasons for the invasion is that MEAM1 whiteflies are more fecund than native species.
Jian-Yang, Guo +2 more
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The Bemisia tabaci Problem in Martinique
1992Since 1990, vegetable crops in Martinique have suffered severe problems caused by the rapid multiplication of the whitefly Bemisia tahuci (Gennadius) (Hcmiptera. Aleyrodidae). The same phenomenon is found throughout the Caribbean and into the South of United States, and seems to be linked to the existence of a special fom1 of this species ...
Ryckewaert, P., Ryckewaert, P.
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Glucosinolate Desulfation by the Phloem-Feeding Insect Bemisia tabaci
Journal of Chemical Ecology, 2016Glucosinolates are plant secondary defense metabolites confined nearly exclusively to the order Brassicales. Upon tissue rupture, glucosinolates are hydrolyzed to various bioactive breakdown products by the endogenous plant enzyme myrosinase. As the feeding of chewing insect herbivores is associated with plant tissue damage, these insects have ...
Malka, O. +5 more
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Host plant resistance to Bemisia tabaci
Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment, 1986Abstract Bemisia tabaci has a wide host range, attacking and damaging plants of several botanical families. Adults and larvae feed by sucking from the phloem bundles of the leaves. B. tabaci is attracted by the colour yellow and is believed not to react to odours.
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