Catálogo de publicaciones

Compartir en
redes sociales


Navegación

Tipo

Acceso

Plataformas

Temática

Mostrando 10 de 10.062 registro(s)

Filtros plataforma quitar todos

Insect Pests of Potato

Más información

978-0-12-386895-4 (en línea)

Disponibilidad
Institución detectada Año de publicación Navegá Descargá Solicitá
No detectada 2013 ScienceDirect

Cobertura temática: Ciencias biológicas - Ingeniería eléctrica, electrónica e informática - Ciencias agrícolas y veterinarias  

Insect Pests of Potato: Biology and Management provides a comprehensive source of up-to-date scientific information on the biology and management of insects attacking potato crops, with an international and expert cast of contributors providing its contents. This book presents a complete review of the scientific literature from the considerable research effort over the last 15 years, providing the necessary background information to the subject of studying the biology management of insect pests of potatoes, assessment of recent scientific advances, and a list of further readings. This comprehensive review will be of great benefit to a variety of scientists involved in potato research and production, as well as to those facing similar issues in other crop systems.
  • Written by top experts in the field, this is the only publication covering the biology, ecology and management of all major potato pests
  • Emphasizes ecological and evolutionary approaches to pest management
  • Summarizes information from hard-to-get publications in China, India, and Russia

Insect Pheromone Biochemistry and Molecular Biology: The biosynthesis and detection of pheromones and plant volatiles

Más información

978-0-12-107151-6 (en línea)

Disponibilidad
Institución detectada Año de publicación Navegá Descargá Solicitá
No detectada 2003 ScienceDirect

Cobertura temática: Ciencias biológicas - Ingeniería eléctrica, electrónica e informática - Ciencias de la salud - Otras ciencias sociales  

A valuable new reference on insect behavior, this exceptional new text delves into the primary sensory communication system used by most insects -- their sense of smell. This important text covers how insects produce pheromones and how they detect pheromones and plant volatiles. Since insects rely on pheromone detection for both feeding and breeding, a better understanding of insect olfaction and pheromone biosynthesis could help curb the behavior of pests without the use of harmful pesticides and even help to reduce the socio-economic impacts associated to human-insect interactions.

* Covers biochemistry and molecular biology of insect pheromone production
* Explains pheromone production in moths, beetles, flies, and social insects
* Describes pheromone and plant volatile reception

Insect Photoperiodism

Más información

978-0-12-084380-0 (en línea)

Disponibilidad
Institución detectada Año de publicación Navegá Descargá Solicitá
No detectada 1980 ScienceDirect

Cobertura temática: Ciencias biológicas - Ciencias agrícolas y veterinarias - Otras ciencias sociales  

Insect Photoperiodism reviews the many aspects of photoperiodism, particularly in insects, emphasizing the concepts that serve to place the subject in a meaningful relationship to the whole of modern biology. Photoperiodism is the study of the adaptive mechanisms by which living systems exploit this source of temporal information.
Organized into 12 chapters, this book begins by discussing the relationships between an endogenous behavioral rhythm and the exogenous photoperiod. Aside from behavioral activities, it also shows that some observable developmental events tend to occur at species-typical times of the day and to be photoperiodically regulated. Notably, photoperiod may exert either or both of two regulatory effects on insect development: growth rate effects or polymorphism. Furthermore, the characteristics of some of the principal physiological rhythms that have been studied; role of photoperiod in the control of diapauses; and the circadian functions and theoretical nature of biological clock are explored in this book.

Insect Resistance Management: Biology, Economics, and Prediction

Más información

978-0-12-396955-2 (en línea)

Disponibilidad
Institución detectada Año de publicación Navegá Descargá Solicitá
No detectada 2014 ScienceDirect

Cobertura temática: Ciencias químicas - Ciencias biológicas  

Neither pest management nor resistance management can occur with only an understanding of pest biology. For years, entomologists have understood, with their use of economic thresholds, that at least a minimal use of economics was necessary for proper integrated pest management. IRM is even more complicated and dependent on understanding and using socioeconomic factors. The new edition of Insect Resistance Management addresses these issues and much more.

Many new ideas, facts and case studies have been developed since the previous edition of Insect Resistance Management published. With a new chapter focusing on Resistance Mechanisms Related to Plant-incorporated Toxins and heavily expanded revisions of several existing chapters, this new volume will be an invaluable resource for IRM researchers, practitioners, professors and advanced students. Authors in this edition include professors at major universities, leaders in the chemical and seed industry, evolutionary biologists and active IRM practitioners. This revision also contains more information about IRM outside North America, and a modeling chapter contains a large new section on uncertainty analysis, a subject recently emphasized by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. The final chapter contains a section on insecticidal seed treatments.

No other book has the breadth of coverage of Insect Resistance Management, 2e. It not only covers molecular to economic issues, but also transgenic crops, seed treatments and other pest management tactics such as crop rotation. Major themes continuing from the first edition include the importance of using IRM in the integrated pest management paradigm, the need to study and account for pest behavior, and the influence of human behavior and decision making in IRM.

  • Provides insights from the history of insect resistance management (IRM) to the latest science
  • Includes contributions from experts on ecological aspects of IRM, molecular and population genetics, economics, and IRM social issues
  • Offers biochemistry and molecular genetics of insecticides presented with an emphasis on recent research
  • Encourages scientists and stakeholders to implement and coordinate strategies based on local social conditions

Insect Sex Pheromones

Más información

978-0-12-379350-8 (en línea)

Disponibilidad
Institución detectada Año de publicación Navegá Descargá Solicitá
No detectada 1972 ScienceDirect

Cobertura temática: Ciencias biológicas - Ingeniería eléctrica, electrónica e informática - Ciencias agrícolas y veterinarias  

Insect Sex Pheromones is a revised and expanded edition of the book "Insect Sex Attractants" and covers greater discoveries in the field of sex pheromones. It is discovered that many sex pheromones are sexually excitatory rather than attractive. This discovery prompted the substitution of the more accurate and encompassing term "pheromones" for the term "attractants" in the title of this edition.
Composed of 13 chapters, this book has chapters that cover the occurrence in female and production in male of sex pheromones in various insect species. The insect orders considered include Acarina, Orthoptera, Hemiptera, Homoptera, Diptera, Isoptera, Neuroptera, Siphonaptera, Coleoptera, Hymenoptera, Lepidoptera, Trichoptera, and Mecoptera. The following chapter discusses pheromones produced by one sex that lure to assemble for mating. This book goes on discussing the anatomy and physiology of scent glands of male and female insects; the attractant perception mechanism; and the behavioral and electrophysiological responses of insects to sex pheromones. Other chapters are devoted to the influence of several factors on the presence of chemical sex attraction or excitation in any insect. The concluding chapters deal with the collection, isolation, identification, synthesis, and analysis of sex pheromones.
This book will greatly appeal to research and economic entomologists, insect physiologists, chemists, and ecologists.

Insect Timing: Circadian Rhythmicity to Seasonality

Más información

978-0-444-50608-5 (en línea)

Disponibilidad
Institución detectada Año de publicación Navegá Descargá Solicitá
No detectada 2001 ScienceDirect

Cobertura temática: Ciencias biológicas - Medicina clínica - Ciencias de la salud  

Leading experts in the field bring together diverse aspects of insect timing mechanisms. This work combines three topics that are central to the understanding of biological timing in insects: circadian rhythms, photoperiodism, and diapause. The common theme underlining each of the contributions to this book is an understanding of the timing of events in the insect life cycle. Most daily activities (emergence, feeding, mating, egg laying, etc.) undertaken by insects occur at precise times each day. Likewise, seasonal events such as the entry into or termination from an overwintering dormancy (diapause) occur at distinct times of the year. This book documents such events and provides an up-to-date interpretation of the molecular and physiological events undergirding these activities.




The study of circadian rhythms has undergone a flowering in recent years with the molecular dissection of the components of the circadian clock. Now that many of the clock genes have been identified it is possible to track daily patterns of clock-related mRNAs and proteins to link the entraining light cycles with molecular oscillations within the cell. Insect experiments have led the way in demonstrating that the concept of a "master clock" can no longer be used to explain the temporal organization within an animal. Insects have a multitude of cellular clocks that can function independently and retain their function under organ culture conditions, and they thus offer a premier system for studying how the hierarchical organization of clocks results in the overall temporal organization of the animal. Photoperiodism, and its most obvious manifestation, diapause, does not yet have the molecular underpinning that has been established for circadian rhythms, but recent studies are beginning to identify genes that appear to be involved in the regulation of diapause. Overall, the book presents the rich diversity of challenges and opportunities provided by insects for the study of timing mechanisms.


Insect Virology

Más información

978-0-12-395604-0 (en línea)

Disponibilidad
Institución detectada Año de publicación Navegá Descargá Solicitá
No detectada 1967 ScienceDirect

Cobertura temática: Ciencias biológicas - Medicina clínica - Ciencias agrícolas y veterinarias  

Insect Virology focuses on viruses affecting insects, from the Tipula and Sericesthis iridescent viruses to the acute and chronic bee paralysis viruses and sacbrood virus. The book explores the symptomatology and pathology of virus diseases in insects; the isolation and purification of the viruses as well as their morphology and chemistry; and the host range.
Organized into 12 chapters, this book begins with a historical overview of insect virology and its emergence as a scientific discipline, along with the previous studies on virus diseases in insects. Before discussing the different kinds of viruses and their distribution throughout the insect kingdom, the book first describes the viruses attacking the insects and the diseases they cause. The book then examines the mode of virus replication, transmission, and latent viral infections. The text explains a rapidly developing technique, the growing of insect tissues in culture, and its use to study the virus in the living cell. The book also considers the relationships of plant viruses with the insects that transmit them. The last chapter deals with the use of insect viruses in the biological control of insect pests.
This book is a valuable source of information for entomologists, insect virologists, virologists in other fields, microbiologists, and others interested in insect virology.

Insect-fungus Interactions

Más información

978-0-12-751800-8 (en línea)

Disponibilidad
Institución detectada Año de publicación Navegá Descargá Solicitá
No detectada 1989 ScienceDirect

Cobertura temática: Ciencias biológicas - Medicina clínica  

The first and only book to summarize this fascinating topic. This symposium volume reviews the current state of knowledge in four principal areas: mycophagy, mutualism, insect spread of plant fungal disease, and insect mycopathology.

Insects as Sustainable Food Ingredients: Production, Processing and Food Applications

Más información

978-0-12-802856-8 (en línea)

Disponibilidad
Institución detectada Año de publicación Navegá Descargá Solicitá
No detectada 2016 ScienceDirect

Cobertura temática: Ciencias de la computación e información - Ciencias biológicas - Ciencias agrícolas y veterinarias  

Insects as Sustainable Food Ingredients: Production, Processing and Food Applications describes how insects can be mass produced and incorporated into our food supply at an industrial and cost-effective scale, providing valuable guidance on how to build the insect-based agriculture and the food and biomaterial industry. Editor Aaron Dossey, a pioneer in the processing of insects for human consumption, brings together a team of international experts who effectively summarize the current state-of-the-art, providing helpful recommendations on which readers can build companies, products, and research programs.

Researchers, entrepreneurs, farmers, policymakers, and anyone interested in insect mass production and the industrial use of insects will benefit from the content in this comprehensive reference. The book contains all the information a basic practitioner in the field needs, making this a useful resource for those writing a grant, a research or review article, a press article, or news clip, or for those deciding how to enter the world of insect based food ingredients.

  • Details the current state and future direction of insects as a sustainable source of protein, food, feed, medicine, and other useful biomaterials
  • Provides valuable guidance that is useful to anyone interested in utilizing insects as food ingredients
  • Presents insects as an alternative protein/nutrient source that is ideal for food companies, nutritionists, entomologists, food entrepreneurs, and athletes, etc.
  • Summarizes the current state-of-the-art, providing helpful recommendations on building companies, products, and research programs
  • Ideal reference for researchers, entrepreneurs, farmers, policymakers, and anyone interested in insect mass production and the industrial use of insects
  • Outlines the challenges and opportunities within this emerging industry

Insects, and Seed Collection, Storage, Testing, and Certification

Más información

978-0-12-395605-7 (en línea)

Disponibilidad
Institución detectada Año de publicación Navegá Descargá Solicitá
No detectada 1972 ScienceDirect

Cobertura temática: Ciencias biológicas - Ciencias agrícolas y veterinarias - Ciencias sociales  

Seed Biology: Insects, and Seed Collection, Storage, Testing, and Certification, Volume III brings together a large body of important information on seed biology. The book describes seed collection, identification, storage, testing, and certification. It also considers insects that directly affect seeds, seed-producing organs, or seed-bearing structures of plants.
Organized into six chapters, this volume begins by outlining man’s dependency on seeds as source of food, fiber, spices, beverages, oils, vitamins, and drugs. Harmful effects of seeds are also mentioned. Separate chapters focus on seed development, dissemination, germination (including metabolism, environmental control, internal control, dormancy, and seed and seedling vigor), protection from diseases and insects, longevity, and deterioration. The book concludes with a discussion on the certification of field and tree seeds, the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development certification schemes, and trends in seed certification.
This book is a valuable source of information for seed producers and users as well as various groups of research biologists and teachers, including agronomists, plant anatomists, biochemists, ecologists, entomologists, foresters, horticulturists, plant pathologists, and plant physiologists.