Related references
Note: Only part of the references are listed.Diamondback Moth Ecology and Management: Problems, Progress, and Prospects
Michael J. Furlong et al.
ANNUAL REVIEW OF ENTOMOLOGY, VOL 58 (2013)
Relevance of resource-indicating key volatiles and habitat odour for insect orientation
I. Beyaert et al.
ANIMAL BEHAVIOUR (2010)
Herbivore-Specific, Density-Dependent Induction of Plant Volatiles: Honest or Cry Wolf'' Signals?
Kaori Shiojiri et al.
PLOS ONE (2010)
Comparative GC-EAD Responses of A Specialist (Microplitis croceipes) and A Generalist (Cotesia marginiventris) Parasitoid to Cotton Volatiles Induced by Two Caterpillar Species
Esther Ngumbi et al.
JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL ECOLOGY (2009)
Hitch-hiking parasitic wasp learns to exploit butterfly antiaphrodisiac
Martinus E. Huigens et al.
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA (2009)
Field-Testing of Synthetic Herbivore-Induced Plant Volatiles as Attractants for Beneficial Insects
Huilin Yu et al.
ENVIRONMENTAL ENTOMOLOGY (2008)
Predatory mite attraction to herbivore-induced plant odors is not a consequence of attraction to individual herbivore-induced plant volatiles
Michiel van Wijk et al.
JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL ECOLOGY (2008)
Essential compounds in herbivore-induced plant volatiles that attract the predatory mite Neoseiulus womersleyi
Hayato Ishiwari et al.
JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL ECOLOGY (2007)
Ozone degrades common herbivore-induced plant volatiles:: Does this affect herbivore prey location by predators and parasitoids?
Delia M. Pinto et al.
JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL ECOLOGY (2007)
Electrophysiological and behavioral responses of a parasitic wasp to plant volatiles induced by two leaf miner species
Jia-Ning Wei et al.
CHEMICAL SENSES (2006)
Role of the lipoxygenase/lyase pathway of host-food plants in the host searching behavior of two parasitoid species, Cotesia glomerata and Cotesia plutellae
Kaori Shiojiri et al.
JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL ECOLOGY (2006)
Response of Plutella xylostella and its Parasitoid Cotesia plutellae to Volatile Compounds
MA Ibrahim et al.
JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL ECOLOGY (2005)
Response of Trichogramma chilonis to infochemicals:: an SEM and electrophysiological investigation
A Sen et al.
BIOCONTROL (2005)
Antennal electrophysiological responses of three parasitic wasps to caterpillar-induced volatiles from maize (Zea mays mays), cotton (Gossypium herbaceum), and cowpea (Vigna unguiculata)
S Gouinguené et al.
JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL ECOLOGY (2005)
Variation in plant volatiles and attraction of the parasitoid Diadegma semiclausum (Hellen)
T Bukovinszky et al.
JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL ECOLOGY (2005)
New insights in analysing parasitoid attracting synomones: early volatile emission and use of stir bar sorptive extraction
N Scascighini et al.
CHEMOECOLOGY (2005)
Emission of Plutella xylostella-induced compounds from cabbages grown at elevated CO2 and orientation behavior of the natural enemies
T Vuorinen et al.
PLANT PHYSIOLOGY (2004)
Effects of specialist parasitoids on oviposition preference of phytophagous insects: encounter-dilution effects in a tritrophic interaction
K Shiojiri et al.
ECOLOGICAL ENTOMOLOGY (2003)
Differential parasitism of Plutella xylostella (Lepidoptera: Plutellidae) larvae by the parasitoid Cotesia plutellae (Hymenoptera: Braconidae) on two host plant species
SS Liu et al.
BULLETIN OF ENTOMOLOGICAL RESEARCH (2003)
Cotesia plutellae parasitizing Plutella xylostella:: Host-age dependent parasitism and its effect on host development and food consumption
ZH Shi et al.
BIOCONTROL (2002)
Olfactory responses of Plutella xylostella natural enemies to host pheromone, larval frass, and green leaf cabbage volatiles
GVP Reddy et al.
JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL ECOLOGY (2002)
Infochemically mediated tritrophic interaction webs on cabbage plants
K Shiojiri et al.
POPULATION ECOLOGY (2001)