منابع مشابه
Registration of F1024 Sugarbeet Germplasm with Resistance to Sugarbeet Root Maggot
Journal of Plant Registrations, Vol. 5, No. 2, May 2011 241 F1024 (Reg. No. GP-272, PI 658654), a sugarbeet (Beta vulgaris L.) germplasm with resistance to sugarbeet root maggot (Tetanops myopaeformis von Röder), was released by the USDA-ARS and the North Dakota Agricultural Experiment Station, North Dakota State University, Fargo, ND on 15 Dec. 2009. F1024 will expedite the incorporation of re...
متن کاملMulti-year survival of sugarbeet root maggot (Tetanops myopaeformis) larvae in cold storage.
To test the hypothesis that long-term survival of sugarbeet root maggot in storage is facilitated by larvae undergoing prolonged diapause, respiration and gene expression patterns of field-collected diapausing larvae were compared with those of 1-, 2-, and 5-year laboratory-stored larvae. Additional assessments were made on post-storage survival, emergence, and reproductive fitness of stored la...
متن کاملSupercooling point plasticity during cold storage in the freeze-tolerant sugarbeet root maggot Tetanops myopaeformis
The sugarbeet root maggot Tetanops myopaeformis (Röder) overwinters as a freeze-tolerant third-instar larva. Although most larvae are considered to overwinter for only 1 year, some may exhibit prolonged diapause in the field. In the laboratory, they can live for over 5 years using a combination of diapause and post-diapause quiescence. In the present study, the cold survival strategies of these...
متن کاملInternal lipids of sugarbeet root maggot (Tetanops myopaeformis) larvae: effects of multi-year cold storage.
Sugarbeet root maggots, Tetanops myopaeformis (Diptera, Ulidiidae), survive more than five years of laboratory cold (6 degrees C) storage as mature third-instar larvae. To quantify energy costs associated with prolonged storage, internal lipids of larvae stored for 1, 2, 3, and 5 years were compared and characterized with those of field-collected diapausing larvae. Internal lipid concentration ...
متن کاملDiscovery of Fusarium solani as a naturally occurring pathogen of sugarbeet root maggot (Diptera: Ulidiidae) pupae: prevalence and baseline susceptibility.
The fungus Fusarium solani (Mart.) Sacc. was discovered as a native entomopathogen of the sugarbeet root maggot, Tetanops myopaeformis (Röder), in the Red River Valley of North Dakota during the 2004 sugarbeet production season. This is the first report of a native pathogen affecting the pupal stage of T. myopaeformis. Forty-four percent of larvae collected from a field site near St. Thomas (Pe...
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ژورنال
عنوان ژورنال: Arthropod Management Tests
سال: 1997
ISSN: 2155-9856
DOI: 10.1093/amt/22.1.320