Volatile Semiochemicals Released from Undamaged Cotton Leaves (A Systemic Response of Living Plants to Caterpillar Damage)
暂无分享,去创建一个
J. H. Tumlinson | J. Tumlinson | USR. Rose | A. Manukian | R. R. Heath | R. Heath | A. Manukian | U. Rose | Ursula S. R. Rosel | Robert R. Heath
[1] J. Takabayashi,et al. Induction of indirect defence aganist spider-mites in uninfested lima bean leaves , 1991 .
[2] R. Gueldner,et al. Constituents of the Cotton Bud. XIX. Attractancy to the Boll Weevil of the Terpenoids and Related Plant Constituents , 1970 .
[3] W. J. Mattson,et al. Herbivory in relation to plant nitrogen content , 1980 .
[4] M. Sabelis,et al. How Plants Obtain Predatory Mites as Bodyguards , 1987 .
[5] John H. Loughrin,et al. Diurnal cycle of emission of induced volatile terpenoids by herbivore-injured cotton plant. , 1994, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[6] R. Stipanovic,et al. Quantification of volatile terpenes of glanded and glandless Gossypium hirsutum L. cultivars and lines by gas chromatography , 1985 .
[7] J. Tumlinson,et al. Systemic release of chemical signals by herbivore-injured corn. , 1992, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[8] M. Sabelis,et al. Do plants tap SOS signals from their infested neighbours? , 1995, Trends in ecology & evolution.
[9] R. Denno,et al. CHAPTER 4 – Leaf Age as a Predictor of Herbivore Distribution and Abundance , 1983 .
[10] M. Zur,et al. Phagodeterrency Induced by Pure Gossypol and Leaf Extracts of a Cotton Strain with High Gossypol Content in the Larva of Spodoptera littoralis , 1977 .
[11] R. Webb,et al. Aphid Alarm Pheromone: Isolation, Identification, Synthesis , 1972, Science.
[12] J. V. Alphen,et al. The role of host‐ and host‐plant odours in the attraction of a parasitoid, Epidinocarsis lopezi, to the habitat of its host, the cassava mealybug, Phenacoccus manihoti , 1987 .
[13] W. Lewis,et al. Efficiency of Cardiochiles nigriceps as a Parasite of Heliothis virescens on Cotton , 1972 .
[14] P. Landolt. Effects of host plant leaf damage on cabbage looper moth attraction and oviposition , 1993 .
[15] Eric L. Singsaas,et al. Why plants emit isoprene , 1995, Nature.
[16] N. Leppla,et al. Advances and challenges in insect rearing , 1984 .
[17] W. Lewis,et al. Exploitation of Herbivore-Induced Plant Odors by Host-Seeking Parasitic Wasps , 1990, Science.
[18] J. Schultz,et al. Rapid Changes in Tree Leaf Chemistry Induced by Damage: Evidence for Communication Between Plants , 1983, Science.
[19] W. J. Lewis,et al. Larval‐damaged plants: source of volatile synomones that guide the parasitoid Cotesia marginiventris to the micro‐habitat of its hosts , 1991 .
[20] John H. Loughrin,et al. How caterpillar-damaged plants protect themselves by attracting parasitic wasps. , 1995, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.