Search results for "SYMBIOSIS"
showing 10 items of 627 documents
Mating systems and parental care.
2008
37 pages
Behavioural Ecology.
2008
Les sociétés animales : lions, fourmis et ouistitis.
2006
Control of grape berry moth larvae using parasitoids: should it be developed?
2009
8 pages; International audience; Besides mating disruption techniques and progress in monitoring techniques (e.g. theuse of food traps against females), biological control may reveal itself very efficient at controllinggrape moth populations. Parasitoids active to control grape moths are known for long invineyards; few of them were already described in the middle of the 19th century in Frenchvineyards and their efficiency was already recognized especially against the diapausing and thefirst spring generations of the moths. Rather numerous attempts to release egg parasitoids havebeen done in different European countries using different species of trichogrammas. The resultsobtained varied a l…
Qualité de la plante hôte et succès reproducteur
2013
Chapitre 24; National audience
Evolutionary routes leading to host manipulation by parasites
2012
18 pages; International audience
Parasites et comportement.
2007
42 pages
Parasites and behaviour.
2008
20 pages
Guide pratique de biostatistique
2022
A l’aide de clés de détermination simples et de cartes mentales, l’utilisateur de ce guide pratique pourra facilement identifier le test adéquat pour ses données en biologie et en écologie.Ce guide pratique de Biostatistique permet de choisir le test adapté au cas rencontré par l'étudiant ou l'enseignant en biologie. Il comporte plusieurs originalités majeures, notamment, la présentation des différentes étapes pour le choix et la conduite de tests statistiques pertinents, une adaptation du traitement des données sous R. Il inclut, à la fin de chaque chapitre, un arbre décisionnel des tests et des exercices choisis à partir de données biologiques et écologiques réelles tirées de la littératu…
Should grape moth larval immunity help explaining resistance against natural enemies?
2011
National audience; In tritrophic systems (plants, phytophagous insects and natural enemies), host plant variation often keys the relative performance of both the herbivore and its associated natural enemies. In bottom-up effects, host plants could affect the fitness of phytophagous insects including growth rate and adult fertility. These effects are indirectly reflected in parasitoids whose success depends on their host quality. For instance, nutrient deficiency or/and toxic defensive compounds of the plants could slow-down the development of herbivorous insects, thus extending the window of vulnerability of attacks by natural enemies. The immune system is arguably the most common resistanc…