Results 151 to 160 of about 7,086 (195)
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Pesticide Outlook, 2001
Alexander Purcell and Helene Feil from the Division of Insect Biology at the University of California, Berkeley, USA, outline how a new threat is transforming an old problem.
Alexander Purcell, Helene Feil
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Alexander Purcell and Helene Feil from the Division of Insect Biology at the University of California, Berkeley, USA, outline how a new threat is transforming an old problem.
Alexander Purcell, Helene Feil
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Glassy-winged sharpshooter, Homalodisca vitripennis (Germar)
2023The glassy-winged sharpshooter (Homalodisca vitripennis), native to the southeastern USA and northeastern Mexico, has become a major economic threat to the grape and wine industry of California, USA, due to its role as a vector for the bacterium Xylella fastidiosa.
Neil Audsley +16 more
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Targeting the glassy-winged sharpshooter
Pesticide Outlook, 2003Following the article in Pesticide Outlook by Alexander Purcell and Helene Feil from the Division of Insect Biology at the University of California, Berkeley, USA (Pesticide Outlook, 2001, 12(5), 199-203), the following is a summary of some recent research being conducted at USDA-ARS in the fight against this dangerous insect.
Alexander Purcell, Helene Feil
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THE TEXAS SHARPSHOOTER FALLACY
Think, 2010A man fires a gun several times at the side of a barn and then draws a circle around a cluster of most of the bullet holes. Drawing a target retrospectively like this doesn't prove the shooting skills of the gunman – no one would consider him a sharpshooter if they knew what he'd done.
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Chapter Twenty-Six Sharpshooters
2008Wintry morning, looking with dull eyes and sallow face upon the neighbourhood of Leicester Square, finds its inhabitants unwilling to get out of bed.
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Glassy-Winged Sharpshooters Depend on Two Endosymbionts
Microbe Magazine, 2006The fruit of the vine does not suffice for the voracious glassy-winged sharpshooter, an insect pest and vector of diseases that feeds on grapevines, citrus, and other plant species. Remarkably, this insect also very much depends on not one, but two bacterial endosymbionts—one supplying amino acids and the other, vitamins—to sustain itself, according to
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