Search results for "Insect"

showing 10 items of 2033 documents

Population structure and incidence of the stolbur phytoplasma vectorHyalesthes obsoletus(Cixiidae) among geographic regions in Switzerland

2013

The dissemination of stolbur phytoplasma (16Sr-XIIA group)-induced yellows diseases depends on the dispersal biology and host plant fidelity of the planthopper vector Hyalesthes obsoletus (Hemiptera: Cixiidae). We analysed the degree of these two properties in H. obsoletus by studying its population genetic structure and stolbur infection rates relative to the two major host plants, Convolvolus arvensis and Urtica dioica, in order to infer relevant divisions for stolbur epidemiology in Swiss viticultural regions. Three regional populations with the potential to determine stolbur epidemiology in distinct ways were identified. First, populations associated with U. dioica in northern Switzerla…

education.field_of_studybiologyEcologyHost (biology)PopulationCixiidaebiology.organism_classificationRace (biology)PlanthopperInsect ScienceVector (epidemiology)Genetic structureBiological dispersaleducationAgronomy and Crop ScienceJournal of Applied Entomology
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Ornithophily on the Canary Islands

1984

(1) On the Canary Islands and Madeira typical bird-flowers occur in at least twelve species of six genera, although true flower-birds are absent. This inconsistency is in part elucidated by field observations on exotic and wild plants of Tenerife. —(2) In the Botanical Garden of Orotava it could be observed that various ornithophilous plants, which were introduced there, were visited by indigenous birds for nectar and in one case (Orthostemon) for food tissue. Of the three bird species involved, an endemic race of Chiffchaff (Phylloscopus collybita) and resident Blackcaps (Sylvia atricapilla) exploit, and pollinate, flowers legitimously, while the Wild Canary (Serinus canaria) is predominan…

education.field_of_studybiologyEcologyPopulationInsectivorePlant Sciencebiology.organism_classificationOrnithophilyPollinatorbiology.animalIsoplexisNectarCanarinaeducationSerinus canariaEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsPlant Systematics and Evolution
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Comparative population genetic structures of the fruit flyUrophora carduiand its primary parasitoidEurytoma robusta

2003

The interaction between two species may depend on geographic scale and this in turn can affect co-evolution among them. The present study comparatively examines population genetic structures of the tephritid gall fly Urophora cardui and its primary ectoparasitoid Eurytoma robusta for inference of relative dispersal patterns and host parasitoid specificity. Genetic differentiation patterns indicated two levels of hierarchical structure in both species: locally similar distance-dependencies but globally differences. Locally, both species showed isolation by distance and a high correlation between host anti parasitoid F ST for the same population-pairs was found. At the local level, E. robusta…

education.field_of_studybiologyEcologyfungiPopulationPopulation geneticsCline (biology)biology.organism_classificationParasitoidColonisationInsect ScienceGenetic structureBiological dispersaleducationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsIsolation by distanceEntomologia Experimentalis et Applicata
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Responses in metabolic rate to changes in temperature in diapausing Colorado potato beetleLeptinotarsa decemlineatafrom three European populations

2015

Many insects survive adverse periods in seasonal environments by entering diapause, a deep resting stage, during which energy consumption is typically low and gas exchange is in the form of a discontinuous gas exchange cycle (DGC). Because insects in high-latitude environments are severely time constrained during summer, an effective diapause termination with careful regulation of metabolic rate is important. The present study examines whether diapausing Colorado potato beetles Leptinotarsa decemlineataSay originating from three latitudinally different regions in Europe differ in their quantitative or qualitative gas exchange patterns in response to an increasing temperature. Overall produc…

education.field_of_studybiologyPhysiologyEcologyPopulationColorado potato beetleLate stageHypoxia (environmental)15. Life on landDiapausebiology.organism_classificationDiscontinuous gas exchange13. Climate actionInsect ScienceMetabolic rateeducationLeptinotarsaEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsPhysiological Entomology
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Functional interactions between members of the REPAT family of insect pathogen-induced proteins

2012

Studies on the transcriptional response to pathogens in the insect larval gut have shown the regulation of several genes after the infection. Repat (REsponse to PAThogens) genes were first identified in Spodoptera exigua midgut as being up-regulated in response to the exposure to Bacillus thuringiensis toxins and baculovirus. Recently, new members of the REPAT family showed a constitutive up-regulation in a B. thuringiensis-resistant population. Based on a yeast two-hybrid screening, we have detected the interaction of REPAT1 with other members of the REPAT family, leading to the discovery of a new member: REPAT8. The functional role of this interaction was shown by following the changes of…

education.field_of_studybiologyPopulationMidgutSpodopteraSubcellular localizationbiology.organism_classificationmedicine.disease_causeMicrobiologyInsect ScienceBacillus thuringiensisGeneticsmedicineeducationMolecular BiologyGenePathogenEscherichia coliInsect Molecular Biology
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Variation in mortality among populations is higher for pymetrozine than for imidacloprid and spiromesifen inTrialeurodes vaporariorumin greenhouses i…

2014

BACKGROUND Insecticide resistance in Trialeurodes vaporariorum W. is unknown in the species' northern distribution range where it inhabits mainly commercial greenhouses. Resistance development in whiteflies feeding on year-round crops in greenhouses is possible owing to the use of chemical treatments to back up biocontrol. The authors tested the response levels to spiromesifen, pymetrozine and imidacloprid in whiteflies collected from seven greenhouses within a 35 km radius in western Finland. RESULTS All except one (PR) population had LC50 values below the recommended concentrations for the tested compounds. However, some populations showed reduced susceptibility to pymetrozine in comparis…

education.field_of_studybiologyResistance (ecology)PopulationBiological pest controlGreenhouseTrialeurodesGreenhouse whiteflyGeneral MedicineWhiteflybiology.organism_classificationToxicologychemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryImidaclopridInsect ScienceBotanyeducationAgronomy and Crop SciencePest Management Science
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Occurrence of three different binding sites forBacillus thuringiensisδ-endotoxins in the midgut brush border membrane of the potato tuber moth,phthor…

1994

The potato tuber moth is susceptible to at least three insecticidal crystal proteins (ICPs) from Bacillus thuringiensis: CrylA(b), CrylB, and CrylC. To design useful combinations of toxin genes either in transgenic plants or in new genetically modified B. thuringiensis strains, it is necessary to determine the binding characteristics of the different ICPs so as not to combine a pair sharing the same binding site. This has been accomplished using two different techniques: 125I-labeling of the ICPs with further measurement of the radioactivity bound to brush border membrane vesicles, and microscopic visualization of the bound ICPs by enzyme-linked reagents such as antibodies or streptavidin u…

education.field_of_studyintegumentary systemBrush borderPhysiologymusculoskeletal neural and ocular physiologyfungiPopulationMidgutGeneral MedicineBiologybiology.organism_classificationBiochemistryBacillaleshumanitiesPhthorimaea operculellaBiochemistryInsect ScienceBacillus thuringiensisBiotinylationBinding siteeducationArchives of Insect Biochemistry and Physiology
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Unshared binding sites for Bacillus thuringiensis Cry3Aa and Cry3Ca proteins in the weevil Cylas puncticollis (Brentidae)

2016

Bacillus thuringiensis Cry3Aa and Cry3Ca proteins have been reported to be toxic against the African sweetpotato pest Cylas puncticollis. In the present work, the binding sites of these proteins in C. puncticollis brush border vesicles suggest the occurrence of different binding sites, but only one of them is shared. Our results suggest that pest resistance mediated by alteration of the shared Cry-receptor binding site might not render both Cry proteins ineffective.

endocrine systemAfrican sweetpotato weevilBacillus thuringiensis ToxinsShort CommunicationBinding sitesInsect controlfungiBacillus thuringiensisToxicologyBinding CompetitiveInsect resistance managementEndotoxinsHemolysin ProteinsInsecticidal proteinsBacterial ProteinsAnimalsWeevilsToxicon
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Involvement of circadian oscillation(s) in the photoperiodic time measurement and the induction of reproductive diapause in a northern Drosophila spe…

2013

An ability to predict forthcoming changes in environmental conditions and get prepared for them in advance is crucial for the survival and reproduction of organisms living in a seasonally changing environment. We have studied the possible involvement of circadian oscillator(s) in the photoperiodic timer controlling seasonal responses by tracing Drosophila montana females' diapause induction in constant darkness and in a classical Nanda-Hamner experiment. Nearly all females developed ovaries in continuous darkness, which shows the direct development to be their default developmental pathway in the absence of photoperiods. In Nanda-Hamner experiment the females' diapause incidence was close t…

endocrine systemLightPhysiologymedia_common.quotation_subjectPhotoperiodCircadian clockZoologyDiapauseRhythmBotanyAnimalsHumansCircadian rhythmDrosophilamedia_commonphotoperiodismLife Cycle StagesbiologyReproductionDarknessbiology.organism_classificationCircadian RhythmInsect ScienceDarknessta1181DrosophilaFemalesense organsReproductionJournal of insect physiology
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Mapping and quantification of cryptochrome expression in the brain of the pea aphid Acyrthosiphon pisum.

2021

Aphids are paradigmatic photoperiodic animals often used to study the role of the circadian clock in the seasonal response. Previously, we described some elements of the circadian clock core (genes period and timeless) and output (melatonin, AANATs and PTTH) that could have a role in the regulation of the aphid seasonal response. More recently we identified two opsins (C-ops and SWO4) as candidate input photoperiodic receptors. In the present report, we focus on the study of cryptochromes (cry) as photoreceptors of the circadian clock and discuss their involvement in the seasonal response. We analyze the expression of cry1 and cry2 genes in a circadian and seasonal context, and map their ex…

endocrine systemanimal structuresTimelessPeriod (gene)Circadian clockPeasBrainContext (language use)Biologybiology.organism_classificationCell biologyAcyrthosiphon pisumCircadian RhythmCLOCKCryptochromesCryptochromeInsect ScienceAphidsCircadian ClocksGeneticsAnimalssense organsCircadian rhythmMolecular BiologyTranscription FactorsInsect molecular biologyREFERENCES
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