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Insect pheromone biochemistry and molecular biology
Authors: ---
ISBN: 9780128196298 0128196297 9780121071516 0121071510 9780080495415 0080495419 9780128196281 0128196289 1281010820 9786611010829 Year: 2021 Publisher: London, United Kingdom Academic Press

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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.*


Book
Animal communication by pheromones
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ISBN: 012640450X 9780126404500 Year: 1976 Publisher: New York, N.Y. Academic Press

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Insect pheromone biochemistry and molecular biology : the biosynthesis and detection of pheromones and plant volatiles
Authors: ---
ISBN: 0121071510 9786611010829 1281010820 0080495419 9780121071516 9780080495415 9780128196298 0128196297 0128196289 9780128196281 Year: 2003 Publisher: Amsterdam ; Boston : Elsevier/Academic Press,

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Abstract

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.*


Book
Pheromone communication in social insects : ants, wasps, bees, and termites
Authors: --- --- ---
ISBN: 9780367282820 9780367298289 Year: 2019 Publisher: Boca Raton : © 1998 CRC Press,

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Periodical
Journal of chemical ecology.
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ISSN: 15731561 00980331 Year: 1975 Publisher: [New York, N.Y.] : [Germany] : Kluwer Academic/Plenum Publishers Springer-Verlag


Periodical
Journal of chemical ecology
ISSN: 00980331 Publisher: New York


Book
La sexualité : phéromones et désir
Author:
ISBN: 2738107796 9782738107794 Year: 2000 Publisher: Paris : Jacob,

Pheromones of social Bees
Author:
ISBN: 0412247402 9780412247408 Year: 1987 Publisher: London : Chapman & Hall,

Pheromones of non-lepidopteran insects associated with agricultural plants.
Authors: ---
ISBN: 0851993451 9780851993454 Year: 1999 Publisher: Wallingford : CABI Publishing,

Insect pheromone research : new directions
Authors: ---
ISBN: 0412996111 1461379261 1461563712 Year: 1997 Publisher: New York : Chapman & Hall,

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This book contains the proceedings of the "First International Symposium on Insect Pheromones," which was held at Wageningen, The Netherlands, from March 6 to March 11, 1994. Eighty participants from 17 countries attended the symposium, which turned out to be a unique forum for the exchange of the latest worldwide findings on insect pheromones, an opportunity to discuss and debate unsettled issues, and a mechanism to define new directions in pheromone research and foster interdisciplinary collaborations. The meeting comprised five sessions representing the breadth of disciplinary interest in pheromones, a typical charac­ teristic of this research area. In the sessions the following topics were presented: (1) control of pheromone production (organized by W. L. Roelofs), (2) sensory processing of pheromone signals (T. L. Payne), (3) neuroethology of pheromone­ mediated responses (T. C. Baker), (4) use of pheromones in direct control (A. K. Minks and R. T. Card6), and (5) evolution of pheromone communication (c. LOfstedt). All sessions started with a series of 30-minute lectures, after which ample time was reserved for discussion. In each session some participants were asked to serve as discussants and to initiate and stimulate discussion, and a rapporteur was recruited to make notes of these discussions and to summarize the general trends emerging from the session. The general program­ ming of the symposium was in the hands of R. T. Carde, A. K. Minks, and T. L. Payne.

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