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Spring Pea Insect Control

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Burns, J. W., Bragg, David E.
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Control of circulation in insects

General Pharmacology: The Vascular System, 1997
1. Studies on the physiology of insect circulation have revealed that the insect central nervous system can exert a strong nervous control over certain dorsal vessels and diaphragms. 2. The function of neurohormonal control over the heartbeat of insects, though demonstrated, is less clear.
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Control of Moulting in an Insect

Nature, 1970
MOULTING in insects is controlled by the prothoracic glands after they have been activated by the brain1–6. α-Ecdysone and 20-hydroxyecdysone stimulate moulting and are thought to be the principal moulting hormones7–11. It is common to assume that the prothoracic glands control moulting by synthesizing ecdysone, even though there is no direct evidence ...
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Insect control with baculoviruses

Biotechnology Advances, 1991
Baculoviruses have been researched extensively for insect control. Three of their features have been particularly attractive: their host specificity and consequential environmental safety, their virulence in host insects, and their capability for causing disease epizootics.
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