Limitations and implications of ingested inhibitors for future pest control may depend on the origin of the inhibitor, as well as the insect's response.
Cite Request full-text Insect proteases, plant protease inhibitors, and possible pest control Article Jun 1991 Jon G. Houseman A.M. Larocque Norman M. R. Thie Since the first observation...
Richard Houseman Subterranean termites (Isoptera... biological control agent hav... View Indigenous arthropod natural... invasive pest. In this review, we combine 9... View Landscape...
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Reviewed May 2010 ; Revised by Richard M. Houseman Division of Plant Sciences · More than 100,000 different kinds of flies have been discovered and named by scientists all over the world. Some common examples include house flies, horse flies, gnats, midges, and mosquitoes. All flies belong to the insect order Diptera, which means "two wings." Since nearly all other insect groups have four wings, the name accurately reflects a unique feature of this group. In nature, flies perform a vital function as decomposers of dead organisms, manure and de ...
It is well known that chemical control of this insect pest is not only undesirable but also expensive. Options for biological control are limited and phero- mone-based insect trapping...
INSECT PROTEASES, PLANT PROTEASE INHIBITORS, AND POSSIBLE PEST CONTROL Jon G. Houseman, A.M. Larocque, N.M.R. Thie Published online by Cambridge University Press: 31 May 2012, pp. 3-11...
This program is necessary to control S. noctilio and reduce the potential for damage from this major pest of pine trees. This environmental assessment 1 (EA) has been prepared, consistent...
of pest control. Most insects digest proteins using trypsin, an endopeptidase that cleaves polypeptide chains on the carboxyl side of arginine and lysine, two basic amino acids. As the most...
Pest Management Science is the international pest science journal of research and development in crop protection and pest control.