Electronic monitoring of feeding behavior of phytophagous true bugs (Heteroptera) / Antônio Ricardo Panizzi, Tiago Lucini, Paula Levin Mitchell.
2021
QL496
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Title
Electronic monitoring of feeding behavior of phytophagous true bugs (Heteroptera) / Antônio Ricardo Panizzi, Tiago Lucini, Paula Levin Mitchell.
ISBN
9783030646745 (electronic bk.)
3030646742 (electronic bk.)
9783030646738
3030646734
9783030646752 (print)
3030646750
9783030646769 (print)
3030646769
3030646742 (electronic bk.)
9783030646738
3030646734
9783030646752 (print)
3030646750
9783030646769 (print)
3030646769
Published
Cham : Springer, [2021]
Copyright
©2021
Language
English
Description
1 online resource : illustrations (some color).
Item Number
10.1007/978-3-030-64674-5 doi
Call Number
QL496
Dewey Decimal Classification
595.7
Summary
This book compiles for the first time all the current information on the electronic monitoring of the feeding behaviour of phytophagous true bugs, describing the mouthparts and modes of feeding of. It includes state-of-the-art illustrations of feeding sites on the various plant structures, and examines how the different feeding strategies are related to the variable waveforms generated using the electropenetrography (EPG) technique. Further, the book discusses the damage (physical and chemical) resulting from feeding activities, as well as the plant reactions to the damage. Covering in detail all EPG studies developed and conducted using true bugs published to date, it explores the use of electronic monitoring of feeding coupled with histological analyses to improve chemical and gene silencing (RNAi) strategies to control true bugs.
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references and indexes.
Access Note
Access limited to authorized users.
Digital File Characteristics
text file PDF
Historical Data
Antônio Ricardo Panizzi received his PhD from the University of Florida, USA and is currently a research entomologist at Embrapa in Brazil. He is an Invited Professor at the Federal University of Paraná, Brazil and at the Universidad de la Republica in Uruguay. He was awarded the ESA International Branch Distinguished Scientist Award, 2017 and served as Editor of the Annals of the Entomological Society of Brazil and Neotropical Entomology, published by Springer. He has also edited/co-edited six books. He served as head of the Entomology Team at Embrapa Soybean Research Center, a consultant for Soybean Entomology Programs in South America and for FAO in Ankara, Turkey, a member of the Agronomy Consult Team for the National Science Foundation of Brazil and an invited scientist at the National Institute of Agro-Environmental Sciences, Tsukuba, Japan. He is an honorary member, president and currently international delegate of the Entomological Society of Brazil.
Tiago Lucini received his PhD from the Federal University of Paraná, Brazil in 2016 and, from 2017 to 2020, was a postdoc at the National Wheat Research Center of Embrapa, Brazil, where he is currently a research assistant. His research interests focus on the bioecology and interactions of heteropterans with their wild and cultivated host plants, and the electrical monitoring of the feeding behavior of stink bugs. He has participated in pioneering publications on the use of EPG on phytophagous pentatomids.
Paula Levin Mitchell received her Ph.D. in Zoology from The University of Texas at Austin (USA) in 1980 and subsequently held a four-year postdoctoral appointment in Entomology at Louisiana State University. After teaching for 25 years in the Biology Department at Winthrop University in South Carolina (USA), she retired as Professor Emerita. She continues to curate the insect collection at Winthrop University and is active in entomological educational outreach. Her specialty is coreid and pentatomid biology, with research interests encompassing feeding behavior, egg parasitoids, and the use of neem extracts to control heteropteran crop pests. She was a Fulbright Senior Research Scholar in India and a Visiting Fellow at the University of Delhi and has served as co-editor of the Journal of Economic Entomology. Her publications include 29 research articles and 3 book chapters
Tiago Lucini received his PhD from the Federal University of Paraná, Brazil in 2016 and, from 2017 to 2020, was a postdoc at the National Wheat Research Center of Embrapa, Brazil, where he is currently a research assistant. His research interests focus on the bioecology and interactions of heteropterans with their wild and cultivated host plants, and the electrical monitoring of the feeding behavior of stink bugs. He has participated in pioneering publications on the use of EPG on phytophagous pentatomids.
Paula Levin Mitchell received her Ph.D. in Zoology from The University of Texas at Austin (USA) in 1980 and subsequently held a four-year postdoctoral appointment in Entomology at Louisiana State University. After teaching for 25 years in the Biology Department at Winthrop University in South Carolina (USA), she retired as Professor Emerita. She continues to curate the insect collection at Winthrop University and is active in entomological educational outreach. Her specialty is coreid and pentatomid biology, with research interests encompassing feeding behavior, egg parasitoids, and the use of neem extracts to control heteropteran crop pests. She was a Fulbright Senior Research Scholar in India and a Visiting Fellow at the University of Delhi and has served as co-editor of the Journal of Economic Entomology. Her publications include 29 research articles and 3 book chapters
Source of Description
Online resource; title from PDF title page (SpringerLink, viewed June 15, 2021).
Added Author
Series
Entomology in focus ; v. 6.
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Table of Contents
1. Introduction to electronic monitoring of the feeding behavior of phytophagous true bugs
2. Mouthparts description and modes of feeding of phytophagous true bugs
3. Feeding sites of true bugs and resulting damage to plants
4. Electronic monitoring of the feeding behavior of phytophagous stink bugs (Pentatomidae)
5. Electronic monitoring of the feeding behavior of Blissidae, Coreidae, Miridae, and Plataspidae
6. EPG procedures for true bugs (Heteroptera)
7. Role of EPG in developing and assessing control methods for heteropteran crop pests
8. Perspectives on the use of EPG in electronic monitoring of phytophagous true bugs.
2. Mouthparts description and modes of feeding of phytophagous true bugs
3. Feeding sites of true bugs and resulting damage to plants
4. Electronic monitoring of the feeding behavior of phytophagous stink bugs (Pentatomidae)
5. Electronic monitoring of the feeding behavior of Blissidae, Coreidae, Miridae, and Plataspidae
6. EPG procedures for true bugs (Heteroptera)
7. Role of EPG in developing and assessing control methods for heteropteran crop pests
8. Perspectives on the use of EPG in electronic monitoring of phytophagous true bugs.