Autor: Horgan, Finbarr G.
- Adaptation by the brown planthopper to resistant rice: A test of female-derived virulence and the role of yeast-like symbionts
- Elevated temperatures diminish the effects of a highly resistant rice variety on the brown planthopper
- Intraspecific competition counters the effects of elevated and optimal temperatures on phloem-feeding insects in tropical and temperate rice
- Positive and negative interspecific interactions between coexisting rice planthoppers neutralise the effects of elevated temperatures
- Temperature-dependent oviposition and nymph performance reveal distinct thermal niches of coexisting planthoppers with similar thresholds for development
- Aspects of brown planthopper adaptation to resistant rice varieties with the Bph3 gene
Autor: Almazan, Maria Liberty P.
- Elevated temperatures diminish the effects of a highly resistant rice variety on the brown planthopper
- Intraspecific competition counters the effects of elevated and optimal temperatures on phloem-feeding insects in tropical and temperate rice
- Positive and negative interspecific interactions between coexisting rice planthoppers neutralise the effects of elevated temperatures
- Temperature-dependent oviposition and nymph performance reveal distinct thermal niches of coexisting planthoppers with similar thresholds for development
Ejemplares similares: Adaptation by the brown planthopper to resistant rice: A test of female-derived virulence and the role of yeast-like symbionts
- Benefits and potential trade-offs associated with yeast-like symbionts during virulence adaptation in a phloem-feeding planthopper
- Aspects of brown planthopper adaptation to resistant rice varieties with the Bph3 gene
- Symbiont-mediated adaptation by planthoppers and leafhoppers to resistant rice varieties
- Rice resistance buffers against the induced enhancement of brown planthopper fitness by some insecticides
- Elevated temperatures diminish the effects of a highly resistant rice variety on the brown planthopper
- Compatibility of insecticides with rice resistance to planthoppers as influenced by the timing and frequency of applications
Ejemplares similares: Elevated temperatures diminish the effects of a highly resistant rice variety on the brown planthopper
- Positive and negative interspecific interactions between coexisting rice planthoppers neutralise the effects of elevated temperatures
- Intraspecific competition counters the effects of elevated and optimal temperatures on phloem-feeding insects in tropical and temperate rice
- Temperature-dependent oviposition and nymph performance reveal distinct thermal niches of coexisting planthoppers with similar thresholds for development
- Aspects of brown planthopper adaptation to resistant rice varieties with the Bph3 gene
- Rice resistance buffers against the induced enhancement of brown planthopper fitness by some insecticides
- Responses by the brown planthopper, nilaparvata lugens, to conspecific density on resistant and susceptible rice varieties