نتایج جستجو برای: potato whitefly

تعداد نتایج: 23432  

Journal: :Journal of virology 2012
Monika Götz Smadar Popovski Mario Kollenberg Rena Gorovits Judith K Brown Joseph M Cicero Henryk Czosnek Stephan Winter Murad Ghanim

The whitefly Bemisia tabaci (Gennadius) is a major cosmopolitan pest capable of feeding on hundreds of plant species and transmits several major plant viruses. The most important and widespread viruses vectored by B. tabaci are in the genus Begomovirus, an unusual group of plant viruses owing to their small, single-stranded DNA genome and geminate particle morphology. B. tabaci transmits begomo...

Journal: :Bulletin of entomological research 2012
P Wang D W Crowder S-S Liu

Interference competition between closely related alien and indigenous species often influences the outcome of biological invasions. The whitefly Bemisia tabaci species complex contains ≥28 putative species and two of them, Mediterranean (MED, formally referred to as the 'Q biotype') and Middle East-Asia Minor 1 (MEAM1, formally referred to as the 'B biotype'), have recently spread to much of th...

Journal: :Bulletin of entomological research 2012
R Moreno-Ripoll R Gabarra W O C Symondson R A King N Agustí

The whiteflies Bemisia tabaci Gennadius and Trialeurodes vaporariorum (Westwood) (Hemiptera: Aleyrodidae) are two of the main pests in tomato crops. Their biological control in Mediterranean IPM systems is based on the predators Macrolophus pygmaeus (Rambur) and Nesidiocoris tenuis Reuter (Hemiptera: Miridae), as well as on the parasitoids Eretmocerus mundus (Mercet) and Encarsia pergandiella H...

2017
Peter C. Krauter Kevin M. Heinz Steven Arthurs

In North America, the sweetpotato whitefly, Bemisia tabaci Genn., is an important pest of greenhouse poinsettia. Growers have limited options to control this pest during propagation of cuttings, which are rooted under mist for several weeks. Early establishment of this pest increases the difficulty of managing the whitefly and retaining high aesthetic standard during the remaining crop producti...

2002
Peter C. Ellsworth Steven E. Naranjo

The sweetpotato whitefly, Bemisia tabaci Genn., has been present in Arizona since the first cultivation of cotton in the 1920s (Russell 1975). For much of its history, its importance was as a sporadic pest and vector of cotton leaf crumple virus. Meanwhile around the world, outbreaks of whiteflies were recorded in cotton in places like the Sudan, Punjab of India, and Israel. The New World also ...

Journal: :Journal of economic entomology 2013
Peter Asiimwe Steven E Naranjo Peter C Ellsworth

The abundance and distribution of insect herbivores is determined by, among other things, plant quality and natural enemies. These two factors vary temporally and spatially, subsequently affecting seasonal population dynamics. The relative influence of plant quality and natural enemies on the seasonal dynamics of Bemisia tabaci (Gennadius) was investigated in a 3-yr field study in cotton. Plant...

2016
Guoxia Liu Hongmei Ma Hongyan Xie Ning Xuan Xia Guo Zhongxue Fan Balaji Rajashekar Philippe Arnaud Bernard Offmann Jean-François Picimbon

Chemosensory proteins (CSPs) are believed to play a key role in the chemosensory process in insects. Sequencing genomic DNA and RNA encoding CSP1, CSP2 and CSP3 in the sweet potato whitefly Bemisia tabaci showed strong variation between B and Q biotypes. Analyzing CSP-RNA levels showed not only biotype, but also age and developmental stage-specific expression. Interestingly, applying neonicotin...

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