Results 251 to 260 of about 697,068 (307)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
Museum Pests–Cultural Heritage Pests
2018Many types of artefacts are vulnerable to deterioration from biological, physical and chemical sources. Artefacts that consist of organic materials, such as fur, hides, linen, plant material, wood, wool, etc., can be infested by a range of insects.
Trematerra P, Pinniger D
openaire +2 more sources
2020
This chapter provides information on some recent results from laboratory and field studies aimed at developing attractive and selective traps for a specific insect pest in a specific agricultural environment. Species from different orders such as Psocoptera, Hemiptera, Thysanoptera, Diptera, Lepidoptera, and Coleoptera are included.
Ben-yakir, David +2 more
openaire +2 more sources
This chapter provides information on some recent results from laboratory and field studies aimed at developing attractive and selective traps for a specific insect pest in a specific agricultural environment. Species from different orders such as Psocoptera, Hemiptera, Thysanoptera, Diptera, Lepidoptera, and Coleoptera are included.
Ben-yakir, David +2 more
openaire +2 more sources
Pestes d'hier, pestes d'aujourd'hui
Histoire, économie et société, 1984Si « l'homme n'a pas invente la typhoide, la peste ou la cholera » (1), en revanche il a invente la Peste, c'est-a-dire la notion d'un fleau collectif que seule une action collective peut combattre. Ce que nous appelons aujourd'hui epidemie et que pendant des siecles l'Occident a appele Peste frappe une communaute en tant que telle a la difference de ...
openaire +2 more sources
Pest Resistance Regulation and Pest Mobility
2006We use a spatially-explicit analytical framework to compare mandatory refuges and a tax on the resistant variety as regulation instruments for pest resistance management. Because the extraction of the common-pool pest susceptibility resource depends on the spatial pattern of pest dispersal, we find that the usual preference for market-based ...
Ambec, Stefan +3 more
openaire +1 more source
Pesticides do not significantly reduce arthropod pest densities in the presence of natural enemies
Ecology Letters, 2021Arne Janssen
exaly
2004
Pests and diseases can have direct effects on the safety, yield and quality of food grains. The food safety aspect is shown, for example, by the effects of molds that produce mycotoxins. Plant diseases may be caused by fungi, bacteria, and viruses, each having its specific means of propagation, mechanism of injury, and possibility of control.
openaire +1 more source
Pests and diseases can have direct effects on the safety, yield and quality of food grains. The food safety aspect is shown, for example, by the effects of molds that produce mycotoxins. Plant diseases may be caused by fungi, bacteria, and viruses, each having its specific means of propagation, mechanism of injury, and possibility of control.
openaire +1 more source
Bottom-Up Forces in Agroecosystems and Their Potential Impact on Arthropod Pest Management
Annual Review of Entomology, 2022Peng Han +2 more
exaly

