Distribution and Quantification of Infectious and Parasitic Agents in Managed Honeybees in Central Italy, the Republic of Kosovo, and Albania. [PDF]
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Temperature-Dependent Pupation Depth in the Oriental Fruit Fly Bactrocera dorsalis and Its Implications for Biological Control. [PDF]
Lin MR, Okuyama T.
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An endoparasitoid Cretaceous fly and the evolution of parasitoidism
The Science of Nature, 2015Parasitoidism is a key innovation in insect evolution, and parasitoid insects, nowadays, play a significant role in structuring ecological communities. Despite their diversity and ecological impact, little is known about the early evolution and ecology of parasitoid insects, especially parasitoid true flies (Diptera).
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Horizontal Transmission of Microbial Symbionts Within a Guild of Fly Parasitoids
Microbial Ecology, 2020Many insects harbor facultative microbial symbionts which affect the ecology of their hosts in diverse ways. Most symbionts are transmitted vertically with high fidelity, whereas horizontal transmission occurs rarely. Parasitoid larvae feed on a single host and are in close physical contact with it, providing an ecological opportunity for symbionts ...
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A novel hearing organ in an acoustic parasitoid fly
The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 1992Female parasitoid flies (Ormiaochracea: Tachinidae) are attracted to singing male crickets [W. Cade, Science 190, 1312 (1975)]. Gravid female flies orient to calling crickets to deposit larvae, which burrow into the cricket in order to feed and grow to adulthood.
D. Robert, R. N. Miles, R. R. Hoy
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Fruit fly parasitoids (Hymenoptera: Braconidae) in south‐east Queensland, Australia
Austral Entomology, 2021AbstractOpiine braconids include natural enemies of tephritid fruit flies, and interest in their greater utilisation for fruit fly control is growing. However, there is a lack of basic data on the prevalence and impact of these wasps for most regions of Australia.
Kiran Mahat, Anthony R Clarke
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Visual Recognition of the Host in the Parasitoid Fly Exorista japonica
Zoological Science, 2005We presented the tachinid fly Exorista japonica with moving host models: a freeze-dried larva of the common armyworm Mythimna separata, a black rubber tube, and a black rubber sheet, to examine the effects of size, curvature, and velocity on visual recognition of the host. The host models were moved around the fly on a metal arm driven by motor.
Yoshifumi, Yamawaki, Yooichi, Kainoh
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Acoustically Orienting Parasitoids: Fly Phonotaxis to Cricket Song
Science, 1975Larviparous female tachinid flies are attracted to taped cricket songs. In the laboratory flies deposit larvae on a cricket mounted to a speaker; the larvae burrow through the cricket's exoskeleton and develop internally. These acoustically orienting parasitoids probably influence male reproductive behavior and sexual competition in crickets.
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The diversity of fruit fly (Diptera: Tephritidae) parasitoids
1994Abstract Three decades ago Hutchinson (1959) asked in his influential paper on niche differentiation and community structure ‘Why are there so many kinds of animals?’. Since then the diversity of species sharing the same resources, or in the case of parasitoids sharing the same hosts, has attracted increasing interest.
Thomas S Hoffmeister, Stefan Vidal
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