Is host-specificity of weed biological control agents likely to evolve rapidly following establishment?
about
Species limits, quarantine risk and the intrigue of a polyphagous invasive pest with highly restricted host relationships in its area of invasion.Climate warming increases biological control agent impact on a non-target species.Herbivore-induced "rent rise" in the host plant may drive a diet breadth enlargement in the tenant.Evolutionary principles and their practical application.Evolution in agriculture: the application of evolutionary approaches to the management of biotic interactions in agro-ecosystems.Evolution of critical day length for diapause induction enables range expansion of Diorhabda carinulata, a biological control agent against tamarisk (Tamarix spp.).Evolving while invading: rapid adaptive evolution in juvenile development time for a biological control organism colonizing a high-elevation environment.Spillover of a biological control agent (Chrysolina quadrigemina) onto native St. Johnswort (Hypericum punctatum).Evolution of Specialization of Cassida rubiginosa on Cirsium arvense (Compositae, Cardueae)Taxonomic similarity, more than contact opportunity, explains novel plant-pathogen associations between native and alien taxa.Evolution and the microbial control of insects.Do-or-die life cycles and diverse post-infection resistance mechanisms limit the evolution of parasite host ranges.Parallel environmental factors drive variation in insect density and plant resistance in the native and invaded ranges.Assessment of herbivore performance on host plants.Creating novel food webs on introduced Australian acacias: indirect effects of galling biological control agentsEvaluating the impact of a biological control agentCarmenta mimosaon the woody wetland weedMimosa pigrain AustraliaHOW INTERACTIONS BETWEEN ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION INFLUENCE CONTEMPORARY INVASION DYNAMICSRefining the ecological basis for agent selection in weed biological controlA promising biological control agent for the invasive alien plant,Pereskia aculeataMiller (Cactaceae), in South Africa
P2860
Q30443838-B0EB3F6E-03D3-4E8A-9AC9-DDDD22F6D43CQ30868110-350B685C-4B60-4746-B0F8-195C9559B122Q33326263-2459AC54-9944-47D7-8FA9-EFF0DF97741BQ35539621-A61F1FAD-DA0A-4239-8BE7-182729B71F96Q35961287-D9C33BDF-AF83-4706-9083-092358994A2EQ36125931-7DB840B7-C3FC-4DD3-9955-FD7353E7334EQ36125938-1DFCCA52-3BF1-41E2-B1D5-A3DEB98DD76AQ36778429-83EB80EA-7779-4B37-A017-3587364C5104Q37196731-CAF894DF-36B0-44E6-A847-383CE332D77EQ39578367-35AE4F06-1B0D-4479-BB15-E6147F87D2BAQ42004584-42B87291-3139-48B2-AFE8-B262B2D5295FQ42239204-F1B73AEE-4372-43B1-BCF2-ACDA6C4015C1Q46326354-395D5A0D-1CB6-4B49-BC73-C6EEB265EFE3Q51703507-ECE78679-8B12-4165-AEE5-8AFD98413D08Q56744702-56561428-3C0D-4420-9382-AEE8625275CBQ56782255-3E7662C8-4630-450F-A796-8B1CFEDB99E9Q56785352-6E43E651-3DC8-40E2-902B-409ADC22F018Q57055019-60D3F150-6064-41ED-88DA-FFEC7BD5C49CQ57609722-14C0999B-A416-4591-9CBF-2299A642AF71
P2860
Is host-specificity of weed biological control agents likely to evolve rapidly following establishment?
description
im Juli 2002 veröffentlichter wissenschaftlicher Artikel
@de
wetenschappelijk artikel
@nl
наукова стаття, опублікована в липні 2002
@uk
name
Is host-specificity of weed bi ...... pidly following establishment?
@en
Is host-specificity of weed bi ...... pidly following establishment?
@nl
type
label
Is host-specificity of weed bi ...... pidly following establishment?
@en
Is host-specificity of weed bi ...... pidly following establishment?
@nl
prefLabel
Is host-specificity of weed bi ...... pidly following establishment?
@en
Is host-specificity of weed bi ...... pidly following establishment?
@nl
P2860
P1433
P1476
Is host-specificity of weed bi ...... pidly following establishment?
@en
P2093
Owain Rhys Edwards
Rieks Dekker van Klinken
P2860
P304
P356
10.1046/J.1461-0248.2002.00343.X
P407
P577
2002-07-01T00:00:00Z