Results 101 to 110 of about 208,113 (167)
Host Plants for the Lanternfly Saiva formosana Kato, 1929 (Hemiptera, Fulgoridae) Endemic to Taiwan, and Parasitism of Its Eggs by Wasps. [PDF]
Hsu MH, Wu ML, Wang LJ.
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Extreme heat exposure of host plants indirectly reduces solitary bee fecundity and survival. [PDF]
Walters J +3 more
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Herbivory by Leaf-Cutting Ants: Exploring the Jasmonate Response in Host and Non-Host Plants. [PDF]
Müller AT, Ossetek KL, Mithöfer A.
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An electrophoretic mobility shift assay using the protein isolated from host plants. [PDF]
He Z, Wang Z, Lu Z, Gao C, Wang Y.
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Chemical Camouflage Induced by Diet in a Pest Treehopper on Host Plants. [PDF]
Lima LD +5 more
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Impacts of Climate Change Conditions on the Potential Distribution of Anoplophora glabripennis and Its Host Plants, Salix babylonica and Salix matsudana, in China. [PDF]
Zhang L, Wang P, Xie G, Wang W.
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2001
When susceptible host plants are challenged with homologous phytopathogenic fungi, selection for resistant host plants is not the only possible outcome. Infection tolerant plants may also be selected. Infection tolerance occurs when the host plant, although infected and colonized by a phytopathogenic fungus, is not noticeably disadvantaged in its ...
Hermann H. Prell, Peter Day
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When susceptible host plants are challenged with homologous phytopathogenic fungi, selection for resistant host plants is not the only possible outcome. Infection tolerant plants may also be selected. Infection tolerance occurs when the host plant, although infected and colonized by a phytopathogenic fungus, is not noticeably disadvantaged in its ...
Hermann H. Prell, Peter Day
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2003
Generally, host plant selection of leaf-cutting ants and particularly the mechanisms of selective foraging in Atta ants have been extensively studied with laboratory colonies as well as with natural colonies in the field using pick-up assays as method for both (e.g., Cherrett 1972a,b; Hubbell and Wiemer 1983; Howard 1987, 1988; Vasconcelos and Cherrett
Rainer Wirth +4 more
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Generally, host plant selection of leaf-cutting ants and particularly the mechanisms of selective foraging in Atta ants have been extensively studied with laboratory colonies as well as with natural colonies in the field using pick-up assays as method for both (e.g., Cherrett 1972a,b; Hubbell and Wiemer 1983; Howard 1987, 1988; Vasconcelos and Cherrett
Rainer Wirth +4 more
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Host-Plant Invasion by Rhizobia
2000Colonization of legume roots by compatible soil bacteria of the genera Azorhizobium, Bradyrhizobium, Mesorhizobium, Rhizobium and Sinorhizobium (collectively known as rhizobia) leads to the formation of specialized nitrogen-fixing organs called nodules. Signals produced by both partners control specificity. Flavonoids found in root exudates trigger the
V, Viprey, X, Perret, W J, Broughton
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