Results 171 to 180 of about 11,854 (229)
Males of <i>Dalbulus maidis</i> Attract Females Through Volatile Compounds with Potential Pheromone Function: A Tool for Pest Management. [PDF]
Sanches MS +5 more
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A new leafhopper genus and one new species of the genus <i>Edwardsiana</i> of Typhlocybini (Hemiptera, Cicadellidae, Typhlocybinae) from China. [PDF]
Yan B +5 more
europepmc +1 more source
Biology of <i>Chrysoperla comanche</i> (Neuroptera: Chrysopidae)-Should This Predator Be Considered for Insectary Production? [PDF]
Daane KM.
europepmc +1 more source
Brochosomes as an antireflective camouflage coating for leafhoppers. [PDF]
Wu W +7 more
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The genome sequence of a leafhopper, <i>Allygidius commutatus</i> (Fieber, 1872) (Hemiptera: Cicadellidae). [PDF]
Crowley LM +9 more
europepmc +1 more source
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Pest Management Science, 2023
AbstractBackgroundThe tea green leafhopper, Empoasca flavescens is the most important pest of tea plants in China. Mymarid attractants based on herbivore‐induced plant volatiles (HIPVs) from leafhopper feeding and oviposition‐induced plant volatiles (OIPVs) were formulated and tested as a novel pest control agent against the leafhopper in tea ...
Baoyu Han
exaly +3 more sources
AbstractBackgroundThe tea green leafhopper, Empoasca flavescens is the most important pest of tea plants in China. Mymarid attractants based on herbivore‐induced plant volatiles (HIPVs) from leafhopper feeding and oviposition‐induced plant volatiles (OIPVs) were formulated and tested as a novel pest control agent against the leafhopper in tea ...
Baoyu Han
exaly +3 more sources
Successional leafhopper assemblages: Pattern and process
Ecological Research, 1994Abstract Auchenorrhyncha (leafhopper) faunas of a series of experimental plots of different successional age were recorded by vacuum sampling. There were clear successional trends in the assemblages. The life‐history strategy of the dominant species changed during succession; the mobile and multivoltine or bivoltine species, which ...
V K Brown
exaly +3 more sources
Physical Control of Leafhoppers
Journal of Economic Entomology, 2008In 2000, a severe outbreak of phytoplasma-caused disease in Limonium spp. flowers devastated the industry in Israel; insecticides were not able to knock down and kill leafhopper vectors before they could transmit the pathogen. Nonchoice laboratory studies were conducted to determine the effect of UV-absorbing plastics on the movement of leafhoppers ...
Phyllis G, Weintraub +2 more
openaire +2 more sources
2014
Describes leaf hoppers, their distribution, damage to host plants, and methods of control.
Day, Eric R., Spring, Alexandra
openaire +1 more source
Describes leaf hoppers, their distribution, damage to host plants, and methods of control.
Day, Eric R., Spring, Alexandra
openaire +1 more source

