549 results on '"Wadhams, P."'
Search Results
202. Combined control of Striga hermonthica and stemborers by maize–Desmodium spp. intercrops.
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Khan, Zeyaur R., Pickett, John A., Wadhams, Lester J., Hassanali, Ahmed, and Midega, Charles A.O.
- Subjects
AGROFORESTRY ,AGRICULTURE ,CROPPING systems ,COMPANION crops - Abstract
Abstract: The African witchweed (Striga spp.) and lepidopteran stemborers are two major biotic constraints to the efficient production of maize in sub-Saharan Africa. Previous studies had shown the value of intercropping maize with Desmodium uncinatum in the control of both pests. The current study was conducted to assess the potential role of other Desmodium spp., adapted to different agro-ecologies, in combined control of both pests in Kenya. Treatments consisted of intercropped plots of a Striga hermonthica- and stemborer-susceptible maize variety and one Desmodium sp. or cowpea, with a maize monocrop plot included as a control. S. hermonthica counts and stemborer damage to maize plants were significantly reduced in maize–desmodium intercrops (by up to 99.2% and 74.7%, respectively) than in a maize monocrop and a maize–cowpea intercrop. Similarly, maize plant height and grain yields were significantly higher (by up to 103.2% and 511.1%, respectively) in maize–desmodium intercrops than in maize monocrops or maize–cowpea intercrops. These results confirmed earlier findings that intercropping maize with D. uncinatum effectively suppressed S. hermonthica and stemborer infestations in maize resulting in higher crop yields. They also demonstrate that the other Desmodium spp. assessed in the current study have similar effects as D. uncinatum, indicating comparable phytochemical and other relevant attributes in these species. Overall results indicate the suitability of the Desmodium spp. for the control of both S. hermonthica and stemborers in maize. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2006
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203. 18O Concentrations In Sea Ice Of The Weddell Sea, Antarctica
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Lange, Μ.A., primary, Schlosser, P., additional, Ackley, S.F, additional, Wadhams, P., additional, and Dieckmann, G.S., additional
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- 1990
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204. Surface current measurements in Terra Nova Bay by HF radar.
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Flocco, D., Falco, P., Wadhams, P., and Spezie, G.
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OCEAN currents ,POLYNYAS ,SEA ice - Abstract
Presents a study that facilitated surface current measurements within the Terra Nova Bay (TNB) polynya, one of the most important coastal polynyas of the Ross Sea, using an ocean surface current radar. Ice production in the TNB polynya; Significance of radar measurements; Description of the radar system.
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- 2003
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205. EDITORIALE.
- Author
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CASARINI WADHAMS, MARIA PIA
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- 2014
206. The “footloose” mechanism: Iceberg decay from hydrostatic stresses
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Wagner, Till J. W., Wadhams, Peter, Bates, Richard, Elosegui, Pedro, Stern, Alon, Vella, Dominic, Abrahamsen, E. Povl, Crawford, Anna, and Nicholls, Keith W.
- Abstract
We study a mechanism of iceberg breakup that may act together with the recognized melt and wave‐induced decay processes. Our proposal is based on observations from a recent field experiment on a large ice island in Baffin Bay, East Canada. We observed that successive collapses of the overburden from above an unsupported wavecut at the iceberg waterline created a submerged foot fringing the berg. The buoyancy stresses induced by such a foot may be sufficient to cause moderate‐sized bergs to break off from the main berg. A mathematical model is developed to test the feasibility of this mechanism. The results suggest that once the foot reaches a critical length, the induced stresses are sufficient to cause calving. The theoretically predicted maximum stable foot length compares well to the data collected in situ. Further, the model provides analytical expressions for the previously observed “rampart‐moat” iceberg surface profiles. Observational iceberg data from 2012 Baffin Bay field experimentMathematical model of iceberg decay due to hydrostatic stressesAnalytic expressions for iceberg profiles and breakup conditions developed
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- 2014
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207. EDITORIALE.
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CASARINI WADHAMS, MARIA PIA
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- 2013
208. A RECORD SUMMER RETREAT OF ARCTIC SEA ICE, SEPTEMBER 2012.
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WADHAMS, PETER
- Abstract
The article investigates the retreat of the Arctic sea ice (ASI) which occurred in September 2012. It explores the events that accompany the retreat including the decrease in sea ice extent in other seasons and the changes in ice type. It explains the effects the retreat on global albedo, on methane production, and on the increase of global sea levels. It also discusses the changes in the Arctic marine system that are associated with the changes in ASI.
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- 2012
209. FUORIUSCITE DI PETROLIO SOTTO I GHIACCI.
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Casarini, Maria Pia and Wadhams, Peter
- Published
- 2011
210. OIL SPILLS IN SEA ICE.
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Casarini, Maria Pia and Wadhams, Peter
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The article discusses the highlights of the two-day study workshop on oil spills in sea ice organized by the Instituto Geografico Polare "Silvio Zavatti". The inaugural address was delivered by renowned oceanographer Walter Munk who noted the link between the rise in sea levels and this workshop's subject. An open discussion steered by the Scientific Committee produced recommendations that were later issued and became known as the Fermo Statement.
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- 2011
211. Testing a new alcohol-free hand sanitizer to combat infection.
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Dyer, David L., Gerenraich, Kenneth B., and Wadhams, Peter S.
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Evaluates the immediate and persistent antimicrobial effectiveness of two alcohol-containing hand sanitizers and surfactant, allantoin, benzalkonium chloride (SAB) hand sanitizer. Requirement for perioperative health care personnel to wash their hands before and after all patient contact; Use of rinse-free hand sanitizers to supplement normal hand-washing.
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- 1998
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212. Wall Paintings at Creswells Farm, Sible Hedingham, Essex.
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Carrick, M., Ryan, P. M., and Wadhams, M. C.
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A description of figurative wall paintings found at Sible Hedingham, Essex (TL 342777). The building is studied to determine the possible date ranging in which the painting work was carried out. The painter's source is discussed in detail with especial reference to current emblemata. Possible reasons for the choice of subject are considered in view of what is known of the owners of the house. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 1987
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213. FIELD EXPERIMENTS ON WAVE-ICE INTERACTION IN THE LABRADOR AND EAST GREENLAND CURRENTS, 1978.
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Wadhams, P.
- Abstract
Projects headed by the Scott Polar Research Institute and the Electromagnetics Institute and supported by the Office of Naval Research studied ocean wave attenuation and the effect of wave action on floe break-up and ice dynamics in the Labrador and east Greenland currents, 1978.
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- 1979
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214. Of Ocean Waves and Sea Ice.
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Squire, V A, Dugan, J P, Wadhams, P, Rottier, P J, and Liu, A K
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- 1995
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215. An ice-water vortex at the edge of the East Greenland Current.
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Wadhams, P. and Squire, V. A.
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- 1983
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216. On the statistical distribution of pressure ridges in sea ice.
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Lowry, R. T. and Wadhams, P.
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- 1979
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217. Dichotomous feedback: a signal sequestration-based feedback mechanism for biocontroller design
- Author
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Sootla, Aivar, Delalez, Nicolas, Alexis, Emmanouil, Norman, Arthur, Steel, Harrison, Wadhams, George H., and Papachristodoulou, Antonis
- Abstract
We introduce a new design framework for implementing negative feedback regulation in synthetic biology, which we term ‘dichotomous feedback’. Our approach is different from current methods, in that it sequesters existing fluxes in the process to be controlled, and in this way takes advantage of the process’s architecture to design the control law. This signal sequestration mechanism appears in many natural biological systems and can potentially be easier to realize than ‘molecular sequestration’ and other comparison motifs that are nowadays common in biomolecular feedback control design. The loop is closed by linking the strength of signal sequestration to the process output. Our feedback regulation mechanism is motivated by two-component signalling systems, where a second response regulator could be competing with the natural response regulator thus sequestering kinase activity. Here, dichotomous feedback is established by increasing the concentration of the second response regulator as the level of the output of the natural process increases. Extensive analysis demonstrates how this type of feedback shapes the signal response, attenuates intrinsic noise while increasing robustness and reducing crosstalk.
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- 2022
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218. Constitutive Dimerization of the G-Protein Coupled Receptor, Neurotensin Receptor 1, Reconstituted into Phospholipid Bilayers
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Harding, Peter J., Attrill, Helen, Boehringer, Jonas, Ross, Simon, Wadhams, George H., Smith, Eleanor, Armitage, Judith P., and Watts, Anthony
- Abstract
Neurotensin receptor 1 (NTS1), a Family A G-protein coupled receptor (GPCR), was expressed in Escherichia coli as a fusion with the fluorescent proteins eCFP or eYFP. A fluorophore-tagged receptor was used to study the multimerization of NTS1 in detergent solution and in brain polar lipid bilayers, using fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET). A detergent-solubilized receptor was unable to form FRET-competent complexes at concentrations of up to 200 nM, suggesting that the receptor is monomeric in this environment. When reconstituted into a model membrane system at low receptor density, the observed FRET was independent of agonist binding, suggesting constitutive multimer formation. In competition studies, decreased FRET in the presence of untagged NTS1 excludes the possibility of fluorescent protein-induced interactions. A simulation of the experimental data indicates that NTS1 exists predominantly as a homodimer, rather than as higher-order multimers. These observations suggest that, in common with several other Family A GPCRs, NTS1 forms a constitutive dimer in lipid bilayers, stabilized through receptor-receptor interactions in the absence of other cellular signaling components. Therefore, this work demonstrates that well-characterized model membrane systems are useful tools for the study of GPCR multimerization, allowing fine control over system composition and complexity, provided that rigorous control experiments are performed.
- Published
- 2009
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219. Assessment of Different Legumes for the Control of Striga hermonthicain Maize and Sorghum
- Author
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Khan, Zeyaur R., Midega, Charles A. O., Hassanali, Ahmed, Pickett, John A., and Wadhams, Lester J.
- Abstract
The witchweed, Striga hermonthica(Del.) Benth., is a major constraint to maize (Zea maysL.) and sorghum [Sorghum bicolor(L.) Moench] production in sub‐Saharan Africa. Intercropping maize and sorghum with desmodium (Desmodiumspp.) effectively controls Strigaand enhances grain yields. Studies were thus conducted to assess the potential role of intercropping maize and sorghum with different food legumes for control of StrigaSeasonal Strigacounts in the intercrops, other than greenleaf desmodium where the counts consistently remained close to zero, were generally not significantly different from those in the control in both crops. A pooled analysis across seasons, however, showed that intercropping sorghum with cowpea [Vigna unguiculata(L.) Walp.], greengram [Vigna radiata(L.) Wilczek], and crotalaria (Crotalaria ochroleucaG. Don), and maize with crotalaria significantly reduced Strigapopulations. Within‐season analysis showed that it was only the greenleaf desmodium intercrop that maintained significantly enhanced grain yields relative to the control. On the other hand, multiseason analysis showed that it was only the crotalaria, cowpea, and greenleaf desmodium intercrops in maize and greenleaf desmodium intercrop in sorghum that significantly enhanced grain yields. These results indicate that intercropping sorghum with cowpea, greengram, or crotalaria and maize with crotalaria could be combined with other cultural methods for a sustainable control of S. hermonthica.
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- 2007
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220. Diel Periodicity in the Production of Green Leaf Volatiles by Wild and Cultivated Host Plants of Stemborer Moths, Chilo partellusand Busseola fusca
- Author
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Chamberlain, K., Khan, Z., Pickett, J., Toshova, T., and Wadhams, L.
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The volatile chemicals produced by four poaceous plant species, blue thatching grass, Hyparrhenia tamba, Napier grass, Pennisetum purpureum, sorghum, Sorghum bicolor, and maize, Zea mays, which are host plants for the lepidopterous stemborers, Chilo partellusand Busseola fusca, were collected by air entrainment and analyzed by gas chromatography. The total quantities of volatiles collected hourly, over a 9-hr period, from P. purpureumand H. tambashowed an approximately hundredfold increase in the first hour of the scotophase. Thereafter, the amount decreased rapidly to levels present during photophase. Although onset of scotophase also triggered an increase in quantities of volatiles collected from two cultivars of S. bicolorand two out of three cultivars of Z. mays, these increases were less dramatic than in the two wild grasses, being only up to 10 times as much as in the last hour of photophase. Analysis showed that up to 95% of the increase in volatiles at the onset of the scotophase was due to just four compounds, the green leaf volatiles hexanal, (E)-2-hexenal, (Z)-3-hexen-1-ol, and (Z)-3-hexen-1-yl acetate, with the latter dominating the volatile profile. Volatiles from P. purpureumwere also collected at 10-min intervals for 70 min spanning the transition from light to dark. The vast increase in production of the green leaf volatiles in this species occurs in the first 10 min of the scotophase followed by a rapid decline within the next 20 min. The relevance of these results to the control of stemborers in a “push–pull” strategy is discussed.The volatile chemicals produced by four poaceous plant species, blue thatching grass, Hyparrhenia tamba, Napier grass, Pennisetum purpureum, sorghum, Sorghum bicolor, and maize, Zea mays, which are host plants for the lepidopterous stemborers, Chilo partellusand Busseola fusca, were collected by air entrainment and analyzed by gas chromatography. The total quantities of volatiles collected hourly, over a 9-hr period, from P. purpureumand H. tambashowed an approximately hundredfold increase in the first hour of the scotophase. Thereafter, the amount decreased rapidly to levels present during photophase. Although onset of scotophase also triggered an increase in quantities of volatiles collected from two cultivars of S. bicolorand two out of three cultivars of Z. mays, these increases were less dramatic than in the two wild grasses, being only up to 10 times as much as in the last hour of photophase. Analysis showed that up to 95% of the increase in volatiles at the onset of the scotophase was due to just four compounds, the green leaf volatiles hexanal, (E)-2-hexenal, (Z)-3-hexen-1-ol, and (Z)-3-hexen-1-yl acetate, with the latter dominating the volatile profile. Volatiles from P. purpureumwere also collected at 10-min intervals for 70 min spanning the transition from light to dark. The vast increase in production of the green leaf volatiles in this species occurs in the first 10 min of the scotophase followed by a rapid decline within the next 20 min. The relevance of these results to the control of stemborers in a “push–pull” strategy is discussed.
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- 2006
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221. Responses of the Aphids Phorodon humuliand Rhopalosiphum padito Sex Pheromone Stereochemistry in the Field
- Author
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Campbell, Colin, Cook, Fraser, Pickett, John, Pope, Tom, Wadhams, Lester, and Woodcock, Christine
- Abstract
Gynoparous female and male damson-hop aphids, Phorodon humuli(Schrank), were caught in the field by water traps that were releasing the sex pheromone of this species, (1RS,4aR,7S,7aS)-nepetalactol. No behavioral activity was elicited by (4aS,7S,7aR)-nepetalactone, the major sex pheromone component of other aphid species such as Megoura viciaeBuckton, even though olfactory cells were found in the secondary rhinaria on the third antennal segment of P. humulithat responded strongly to this compound. Gynoparous female P. humuliin the field responded less strongly to (1R,4aS,7S,7aR)-nepetalactol, the sex pheromone of the bird cherry-oat aphid, Rhopalosiphum padi(L.), than they did to the (4aR,7S,7aS)-nepetalactols, but males responded only to the latter. The (4aR,7S,7aS)-nepetalactone showed no electrophysiological activity so was not used in field trials. Releasing either the (4aS,7S,7aR)-nepetalactone or the (1R,4aS,7S,7aR)-nepetalactol with the (4aR,7S,7aS)-nepetalactols did not inhibit the response of P. humuligynoparous females and males to the latter. Males of R. padiresponded as strongly to the (4aR,7S,7aS)-nepetalactols as they did to (1R,4aS,7S,7aR)-nepetalactol. Males of P. humuliand R. padiresponded positively to an increased concentration of the (4aR,7S,7aS)-nepetalactols released from two vials compared with that from a single vial, as did P. humuli(in one of two experiments) and R. padito the (1RS,4aR,7S,7aS)- and (1R,4aS,7S,7aR)-nepetalactols when released together.
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- 2003
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222. Field Trapping of Chrysopa cognata (Neuroptera: Chrysopidae) with Aphid Sex Pheromone Components in Korea
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Boo, Kyung Saeng, Kang, S.S., Park, J.H., Pickett, J.A., and Wadhams, L.J.
- Abstract
Attraction of Chrysopa cognata (McLachlan) adults to two major aphid sex pheromone components, (-)-(1R,4aS,7S,7aR)-nepetalactol (NL) and (+)-(4aS,7S,7aR)-nepetalactone (NN), was investigated in field experiments in Korea. C. cognata adults were much more highly attracted to NL than to NN. Even though NN also attracted significantly more C. cognata adults than did solvent control, there were no synergistic or additive effects on the trappings by NL. In a series of trapping experiments with blends of the two chemicals, C. cognata numbers trapped tended to increase with the content of NL, but never more than that by NL alone. As the amount of aphid sex pheromone components increased, more C. cognata were captured. However, the period of attraction for NL significantly decreased with time and after 50 days few C. cognata adults were attracted. C. cognata adults were mainly captured during the night and only a few were attracted in daytime during the late fall period. Even during the night, most of C. cognata were attracted from about 7:00 PM to 11:30 PM with apparently a longer period of activity in the summer than in the fall with an intermediate activity period in the spring. C. cognata adults caught in traps throughout the trap experiments were almost only males, in agreement with electroantenogram (EAG) results which showed that only male adults responded. The EAG response was stronger to NL than to NN. In addition to C. cognata, a few male adults of Chrysopa formosa (Brauer) and Chrysopa phyllochroma (Wesmael) were also captured in field pheromone traps.
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- 2003
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223. Decadal decrease of Antarctic sea ice extent inferred from whaling records revisited on the basis of historical and modern sea ice records
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Ackley, Stephen, Wadhams, Peter, Comiso, Josefino C., and Worby, Anthony P.
- Abstract
In previous work, whaling catch positions were used as a proxy record for the position of the Antarctic sea ice edge and mean sea ice extent greater than the present one spanning 2.8° latitude was postulated to have occurred in the pre-1950s period, compared to extents observed since 1973 from microwave satellite imagery. The previous conclusion of an extended northern latitude for ice extent in the earlier epoch applied only to the January (mid-summer) period. For this summer period, however, there are also possible differences between ship and satellite-derived measurements. Our work showed a consistent summer offset (November– December), with the ship-observed ice edge 1 - 1.5° north of the satellitederived ice edge. We further reexamine the use of whale catch as an ice edge proxy where agreement was claimed between the satellite ice edge (1973–1987) and the ship whale catch positions. This examination shows that, while there may be a linear correlation between ice edge position and whale catch data, the slope of the line deviates from unity and the ice edge is also further north in the whale catch data than in the satellite data for most latitudes. We compare the historical (direct) record and modern satellite maps of ice edge position accounting for these differences in ship and satellite observations. This comparison shows that only regional perturbations took place earlier, without significant deviations in the mean ice extents, from the pre-1950s to the post-1970s. This conclusion contradicts that previously stated from the analysis of whale catch data that indicated Antarctic sea ice extent changes were circumpolar rather than regional in nature between the two periods.
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- 2003
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224. Control of Witchweed Striga hermonthicaby Intercropping with Desmodiumspp., and the Mechanism Defined as Allelopathic
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Khan, Zeyaur, Hassanali, Ahmed, Overholt, William, Khamis, Tsanuo, Hooper, Antony, Pickett, John, Wadhams, Lester, and Woodcock, Christine
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During investigations into the control of insect damage to maize crops in subsistence farming in Kenya, which involved intercropping with repellent plants, the fodder legumes silverleaf (Desmodium uncinatum) and greenleaf (D. intortum) were also found to reduce dramatically the infestation of maize by parasitic witchweeds such as Striga hermonthica. This effect was confirmed by further field testing and shown to be significantly greater than that observed with other legumes, e.g., cowpea, as were the concomitant yield increases. The mechanism was investigated, and although soil shading and addition of nitrogen fertilizer showed some benefits against S. hermonthicainfestation, a putative allelopathic mechanism for D. uncinatumwas observed. In screenhouse studies, a highly significant reduction in S. hermonthicainfestation was obtained when an aqueous solution, eluting from pots in which D. uncinatumplants were growing, was used to irrigate pots of maize planted in soil seeded with high levels of S. hermonthica. Growth of the parasitic weed was almost completely suppressed, whereas extensive infestation occurred with the control eluate. Laboratory investigations into the allelopathic effect of D. uncinatum, using samples of water-soluble chemical components exuded from cleaned roots, demonstrated that this involved a germination stimulant for S. hermonthicaand also an inhibitor for haustorial development.
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- 2002
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225. Effectiveness of a Nonrinse, Alcohol-Free Antiseptic Hand Wash
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Moadab, Anoosh, Rupley, Kathryne F., and Wadhams, Peter
- Abstract
This study evaluated the efficacy of a novel surfactant, allantoin, and benzalkonium chloride hand sanitizer using the US Food and Drug Administration’s method for testing antiseptic hand washes that podiatric physicians and other health-care personnel use. The alcohol-free product, HandClens, was compared with an alcohol-based product, Purell. Independent researchers from the California College of Podiatric Medicine conducted the study using 40 volunteer students from the class of 2001. The results show that HandClens outperformed Purell and met the regulatory requirements for a hand sanitizer. Purell failed as an antimicrobial hand wash and was less effective than a control soap used in the study. (J Am Podiatr Med Assoc 91(6): 288-293, 2001)
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- 2001
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226. Behavioural Responses of Western Flower Thrips, Frankliniella occidentalis(Pergande), to Volatiles from Three Aromatic Plants
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Chermenskaya, T., Burov, V., Maniar, S., Pow, E., Roditakis, N., Selytskaya, O., Shamshev, I., Wadhams, L., and Woodcock, C.
- Abstract
The behavioural responses of adult female western flower thrips, Frankliniella occidentalis(Pergande) to volatiles from meadow-sweet (Filipendula ulmaria), bay laurel (Laurus nobilis) and sage (Salvia officinalis)were investigated in laboratory bioassays. Volatiles collected by entrainment of a solvent extract of F. ulmariawere more attractive than was the original extract. Frankliniella occidentaliswas also significantly attracted to volatiles from L. nobilisand S. officinalis.Analysis by gas chromatography and mass spectrometry identified 1,8-cineole (eucalyptol) as one of the main volatile components of all three plant species. In coupled gas chromatography-electroantennography studies with F. ulmaria, both 1,8-cineole and methyl salicylate elicited responses from F. occidentalis.Eucarvone was identified as the major component of F. ulmariavolatiles, but showed no electrophysiological activity. Behavioural responses of thrips to a range of concentrations of 1,8-cineole and methyl salicylate were tested using a modified Pettersson ’star’ olfactometer. 1,8-Cineole showed some attractant activity for the thrips at 0.01 mg, but methyl salicylate was repellent at all the concentrations tested. La réponse comportementale de femelles adultes de thrips (Frankliniella occidentalis) aux émissions volatiles de trois plantes aromatiques, la filipendule (Filipendula ulmaria), le laurier-sauce (Laurus nobilis)et la sauge (Salvia officinalis), a été étudiée dans des essais au laboratoire. Les produits volatils obtenus par collecte d’effluves d’un extrait par solvant de F. ulmariase sont montrés plus attractifs que l’extrait original. Frankliniella occidentalisa aussi été attiré significativement par les émissions volatiles de L. nobiliset S. officinalis.Des analyses par Chromatographie en phase gazeuse et spectrométrie de masse ont permis d’identifier le 1,8-cineole (eucalyptol) comme l’un des composés volatils majeurs des trois espèces végétales. Dans des études par couplage Chromatographie en phase gazeuse-électroantennographie, avec un extrait de F. ulmaria, le 1,8-cineole et le methyl salicylate ont tous deux induit des réponses chez F. occidentalis.L’eucarvone a été identifié comme le composé majoritaire des émissions volatiles de F. ulmaria, mais n’a induit aucune activité électrophysiologique. Les réponses comportementales des thrips à une gamme de concentrations de 1,8-cineole et de methyl salicylate ont été évaluées dans un olfactomètre de Pettersson modifé. Le 1,8-cineole a induit une certaine attraction chez les thrips à la concentration de 0,01 mg, mais le methyl salicylate a été répulsif à toutes les concentrations testées.
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- 2001
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227. Can aphid-induced plant signals be transmitted aerially and through the rhizosphere?
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Chamberlain, K., Guerrieri, E., Pennacchio, F., Pettersson, J., Pickett, J. A., Poppy, G. M., Powell, W., Wadhams, L. J., and Woodcock, C. M.
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- 2001
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228. Response of the Ladybird Parasitoid Dinocampus coccinellae to Toxic Alkaloids from the Seven-spot Ladybird, Coccinella septempunctata
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Al Abassi, S., Birkett, M., Pettersson, J., Pickett, J., Wadhams, L., and Woodcock, C.
- Abstract
Electrophysiological and behavioral responses of the ladybird parasitoid Dinocampus coccinellae to volatiles from the seven-spot ladybird, Coccinella septempunctata, were investigated to identify semiochemicals involved in host location. Coupled gas chromatography–electroantennography (GC-EAG) with D. coccinellae located a small peak of prominent activity in an extract of volatiles from adult C. septempunctata. The active compound was identified by coupled GC-mass spectrometry and by comparison with an authentic sample as the free-base alkaloid precoccinelline, which forms part of the toxic defense of this ladybird. Behavioral studies in an olfactometer showed that D. coccinellae was significantly attracted to the volatile extract and also to the alkaloid. Myrrhine, a stereoisomer of precoccinelline found in low amounts in C. septempunctata and in other ladybird species, was shown to be electrophysiologically active and significantly attractive. Perception of ladybird alkaloids by D. coccinellae is a rare example of toxicants acting as aerially transmitted cues for interactions between the third and fourth trophic levels.
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- 2001
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229. ELECTROPHYSIOLOGICAL AND BEHAVIOURAL RESPONSES OF TOMICUS PINIPERDAAND TOMICUS MINOR(COLEOPTERA: SCOLYTIDAE) TO NON-HOST LEAF AND BARK VOLATILES
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Schlyter, Fredrik, Zhang, Qing-He, Anderson, Peter, Byers, John A., Wadhams, Lester J., Löfqvist, Jan, and Birgersson, Göran
- Abstract
AbstractLeaf and bark volatiles from non-host birches, Betula pendulaRoth. and Betula pubescensEhrh. (Betulaceae), and aspen, Populus tremulaL. (Salicaceae), were tested on spring-dispersing Tomicus piniperda(L.) and Tomicus minor(Hart.) by gas chromatographic – electroantennographic detection (GC–EAD) and by attractant-baited traps in southern Sweden. GC–EAD analysis of the head-space volatiles from fresh bark chips of B. pendularevealed two green leaf alcohols, 1-hexanol and (Z)-3-hexen-1-ol, that consistently elicited antennal responses by T. piniperdaand T. minor. Further analyses with synthetic mixtures showed that the antennae of these two Tomicusspecies also responded to other green leaf alcohols, such as (E)-2-hexen-1-ol found from the non-host leaves, and C8-alcohols, 3-octanol and 1-octen-3-ol, from bark of non-host birches and aspen. No antennal responses of the Tomicusspecies were observed to green leaf C6-aldehydes and C6-acetate or to non-host bark volatiles like trans-conophthorin, benzaldehyde, salicylaldehyde, and benzyl alcohol. In field trapping experiments, blends of electrophysiologically active green leaf alcohols or C8-alcohols resulted in reductions (> 60%) in the number of T. piniperdacaptured compared with that for the kairomone-baited trap. When these two blends were combined, trap catch was further reduced (90%), which was not significantly different from that for the blank control. Neither the blend of two green leaf aldehydes plus the acetate nor the bark compounds trans-conophthorin or benzyl alcohol reduced trap catches. Tomicus minorhad a response pattern similar to that of T. piniperda. Hylurgops palliatus(Gyll.) (Coleoptera: Scolytidae) was attracted to the combination of kairomone and verbenone but not to kairomone and was not affected by the blends of green leaf volatiles. Our results suggest that selected leaf–bark C6-alcohols and the bark C8-alcohols may have potential in developing semiochemical-based management programs against both pine shoot beetles by repelling them from suitable breeding and feeding sites.
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- 2000
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230. Recognition of Complex Odors by Restrained and Free-Flying Honeybees, Apis mellifera
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Laloi, David, Bailez, Omar, Blight, Margaret, Roger, Bernard, Pham-Delègue, Minh-Ha, and Wadhams, Lester
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Complex odor recognition in the honeybee was investigated using two behavioral assays: (1) the conditioning of the proboscis extension (CPE) with restrained individuals, and (2) the observation of foragers visiting an artificial feeder in a flight room. Nine compounds, previously identified as oilseed rape flower volatiles, were tested either individually or in mixtures. Different sets of experiments were done to determine: (1) the acquisition rate of the nine compounds in the CPE assay, and (2) the discrimination of the individual compounds after conditioning to a mixture, using the CPE assay and free-flying foragers. After conditioning to a complex mixture, honeybees established a hierarchy among the components, with some of them accounting for a major part of the behavioral activity of the mixture. Both behavioral assays led to the same classification of compounds, indicating good agreement between discriminating abilities of restrained individuals and of a population of foragers. The key compounds for recognition of these mixtures were those that were well learned when presented individually. However, the recognition of some compounds was affected by the other components of the mixture, with the activity of some compounds being either enhanced or reduced.
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- 2000
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231. Identification of Host and Nonhost Semiochemicals of Eucalyptus Woodborer Phoracantha semipunctata by Gas Chromatography–Electroantennography
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Barata, E., Pickett, J., Wadhams, L., Woodcock, C., and Mustaparta, H.
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The host range of the eucalyptus woodborer, Phoracantha semipunctata, is restricted mainly to species of Eucalyptus(Myrtaceae). Volatile semiochemicals possibly involved in host selection and nonhost rejection were identified by high-resolution gas chromatography–electroantennography on samples obtained by air entrainment of foliage from host and nonhost trees. Compounds from the main host E. globulus, active at physiologically significant levels, included 3-hydroxy-2-butanone, 3-methyl1-butanol, a branched epoxyalkane, ethyl 3-methylbutanoate, (Z)-3-hexen1-ol, α-pinene, β-pinene, p-cymene, 1,8-cineole, limonene, and guaiene. E. camaldulensisgave a similar spectrum of volatiles that also included α-terpinene and linalool. The volatiles from E. tereticorniswere similar to E. globulusbut without ethyl 3-methylbutanoate, (Z)-3-hexen-1-ol, 1,8-cineole, or limonene. The nonhost Pinus pinaster(Pinaceae) yielded active compounds common to the host species, including ethyl 3-methylbutanoate, (Z)-3-hexen-1-ol, α-pinene, β-pinene, p-cymene, 1,8-cineole, limonene, and linalool but, in addition, myrcene, (E)-β-ocimene, and α-cubebene as candidate nonhost cues. The nonhost Olea europeae(Oleaceae) also shared some active compounds in common with the host species, including 3-hydroxy-2-butanone, 3-methyl-1-butanol, the branched epoxyalkane, ethyl 3-methylbutanoate, (Z)-3-hexen-1-ol, α-pinene, but an apparent nonhost cue from this species was the homomonoterpene (E)-4,8-dimethylnona-1,3,7triene, plus other compounds so far unidentified.
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- 2000
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232. Response of the Seven-spot Ladybird to an Aphid Alarm Pheromone and an Alarm Pheromone Inhibitor is Mediated by Paired Olfactory Cells
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Al Abassi, S., Birkett, M., Pettersson, J., Pickett, J., Wadhams, L., and Woodcock, C.
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Electrophysiological responses of adult seven-spot ladybirds, Coccinella septempunctata, to (E)-β-farnesene, an aphid alarm pheromone, and (−)-β-caryophyllene, a plant-derived alarm pheromone inhibitor, were investigated by recording from single olfactory cells (neurons) on the antenna. Cells having high specificity for each of the two compounds were identified. Furthermore, these two cell types were frequently found in close proximity, with a larger amplitude consistently recorded for the cell responding specifically to (E)-β-farnesene. Preliminary behavioral studies in a two-way olfactometer showed that walking adults were significantly attracted to (E)-β-farnesene; this activity was inhibited with increasing proportions of (−)-β-caryophyllene. The possible ecological significance of colocation or pairing of olfactory cells for semiochemicals with different behavioral roles is discussed.
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- 2000
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233. Major Sex Pheromone Component of Female Herald Moth Scoliopteryx libatrix is the Novel Branched Alkene (6Z,13)-Methylheneicosene
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Francke, W., Plass, E., Zimmermann, N., Tietgen, H., Tolasch, T., Franke, S., Subchev, M., Toshova, T., Pickett, J., Wadhams, L., and Woodcock, C.
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The major component of the female-produced sex pheromone of Scoliopteryx libatrixhas been characterized by chemical analysis, synthesis, electrophysiological studies and field tests as (6Z,13)-methylheneicosene, probably the 13S-isomer. This is the first example of a branched chain alkene as a sex pheromone in the Noctuidae and is markedly different from the pheromones of other members of the family. The systematic position of S. libatrix, belonging to a monotypic genus of a one-member subfamily within the Noctuidae, may reflect the unusual structure of the sex pheromone.
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- 2000
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234. Sex Pheromone of the Peach Aphid, Tuberocephalus momonis, and Optimal Blends for Trapping Males and Females in the Field
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Boo, K., Choi, M., Chung, I., Eastop, V., Pickett, J., Wadhams, L., and Woodcock, C.
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Chemical analysis of the volatiles released by sexual females (oviparae) of the peach aphid, Tuberocephalus momonis, identified two ubiquitous aphid sex pheromone components, (4aS,7S,7aR)-nepetalactone and (4aS,7S,7aR)-nepetalactol, in a ratio of 4 : 1. In field trials in Korea, employing traps releasing the two compounds in differing ratios, the most effective sex pheromone blend for trapping male T. momoniswas found to be 85 : 15 nepetalactone–nepetalactol. Surprisingly, large numbers of presexual females (gynoparae) of this species were also collected when the catching rates were highest. In addition to T. momonis, over 20 other species of aphids were caught, particularly Myzus lythri, M. dycei, Lachnus tropicalisand M. persicae, in descending order of abundance.
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- 2000
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235. Arctic sea ice and snow cover albedo variability and trends during the last three decades.
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Marcianesi, F., Aulicino, G., and Wadhams, P.
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ALBEDO ,SEA ice ,SNOW cover ,RADIATIVE forcing ,CARBON dioxide ,SERVER farms (Computer network management) - Abstract
The aim of the present study is to assess the full effect on the albedo of both sea ice extent decrease and snowline retreat in the Arctic during the last three decades. Averaged over the globe, the overall warming effect due to Arctic land and ocean albedo change corresponds to adding about 44% to the direct effect of human CO 2 emissions during the same period. In fact, the area and thickness of Arctic sea ice have both been declining in this time frame. This has caused feedbacks affecting the whole global climate system. One such is albedo feedback of sea ice shrinking which was previously estimated (Pistone et al., 2014) to add about 25% to the direct warming effect of anthropogenic CO 2 emissions. In this study, we demonstrate that the role of snowline retreat in albedo decrease is comparable to that of sea ice shrinking. To this aim, we estimate the radiative forcing (W/m
2 ) due to snow and ice decrease during 34 years (1982–2015) from the analysis of changes of observed albedo based on the Clouds and the Earth's Radiant Energy System Energy Balanced And Filled (CERES EBAF) dataset, paired with sea ice and snow cover data from the US National Snow & Ice Data Center (NSIDC). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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236. SAR Imaging Of Ocean Waves In The Marginal Ice Zone.
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Lyden, J., Shuchman, R., Zago, C., Rottier, P., and Wadhams, P.
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- 1988
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237. A Novel Approach for Isolation of Volatile Chemicals Released by Individual Leaves of a Plant in situ
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Agelopoulos, Nicky, Hooper, Antony, Maniar, Sangita, Pickett, John, and Wadhams, Lester
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A glass chamber designed specifically for collecting volatile chemicals from individual leaves of a plant in situ is described. The effectiveness of the chamber was demonstrated by collecting volatile chemicals from single leaves of two plant species, potato (Solanum tuberosum) and broad bean (Vicia faba), before and after mechanical damage. The glass chamber, in conjunction with thermal desorption, enables reduction of the entrainment time and thereby allows the monitoring of compounds released by leaf damage in successive 5-min periods. An intact broad bean leaf, in the middle of the day, produces small amounts of the green leaf volatiles (E)-2-hexenal and (Z)-3-hexen-1-ol. However, during the first 5 min after mechanical damage, large amounts of (Z)-3-hexenal, (E)-2-hexenal, and (Z)-3-hexen-1-ol are produced. The decline in production of (Z)-3-hexenal and (E)-2-hexenal is fast, and after 10 min, these compounds reach very low levels. (Z)-3-Hexen-1-ol shows an increase for the first 10 min and then a gradual decline. An intact potato leaf, in the middle of the day, produces very small amounts of the sesquiterpene hydrocarbons β-caryophyllene and germacrene-D. After being damaged, the profile of released volatiles is different from that of broad bean. In potato, damage is associated with release of large amounts of green leaf volatiles and sesquiterpene hydrocarbons. Compounds such as (Z)-3-hexenal, (E)-2-hexenal, and (Z)-3-hexen-1-ol are released in high amounts during the first 5 min after damage, but after 10 min, these drop to very low levels. High release associated with damage is also observed for β-caryophyllene, (E)-β-farnesene, germacrene-D, and β-bisabolene. The highest level is reached 5 min after damage and 15 min later, these compounds drop to low levels. The significance of compounds released after plant damage is discussed.
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- 1999
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238. Perception of Oviposition-Deterring Pheromone by Cabbage Seed Weevil (Ceutorhynchus assimilis)
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Ferguson, A., Ziesmann, J., Blight, M., Williams, I., Wadhams, L., Clark, S., Woodcock, C., and Mudd, A.
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Following oviposition into a pod of oilseed rape (Brassica napus), the female cabbage seed weevil (Ceutorhynchus assimilis) marks the pod with oviposition-deterring pheromone (ODP) by brushing it with her eighth abdominal tergite. On an unmarked pod, oviposition site selection was always accompanied by intensive antennation of the pod. Females approaching a freshly ODP-marked pod brought their antennae within 1 mm of the pod but usually did not antennate it before rejecting it for oviposition. Females with the clubs of their antennae amputated continued to discriminate pods from stems or petioles as oviposition sites but showed no behavioral response to ODP. Extracts of volatiles air-entrained from ovipositing weevils failed to inhibit oviposition. Air passed over a behaviorally active extract of ODP did not elicit a detectable electroantennogram response. By contrast, when presented as a gustatory stimulus to the sensilla chaetica of the antennal club, a behaviorally active extract of ODP from postdiapause, gravid females elicited a strong electrophysiological response. This response usually involved more than one cell and displayed a phasic–tonic time course over the recording period of 10 sec. Extract from prediapause (and hence sexually immature) females elicited neither behavioral nor electrophysiological (contact) responses. Thus the ODP of the cabbage seed weevil is sensed primarily by contact chemoreception at the sensilla chaetica of the antennae, and the electrophysiological responses recorded from these gustatory sensilla are of value as the basis of a bioassay to assist identification of the active constituent(s) of the pheromone.
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- 1999
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239. exploiting semiochemicals in insect control<fnr href="fn1"></fnr><fn id="fn1">based on poster presentations at the 9th international congress of pesticide chemistry, organised by the international union of pure and applied chemistry (iupac), and held in london, uk, 27 august 1998.</fn>
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Agelopoulos, Nicky, Birkett, Michael A, Hick, Alastair J, Hooper, Anthony M, Pickett, John A, Pow, Eleanor M, Smart, Lesley E, Smiley, Diane W M, Wadhams, Lester J, and Woodcock, Christine M
- Abstract
The present situation and future prospects for the use of semiochemicals for insect control is reviewed, with particular reference to the work being carried out at IACR-Rothamsted. The techniques used to identify pheromones and other semiochemicals, and the types of compound found in various insect classes, are described. The effects of such compounds on pests, their predators and other members of the ecosystem are considered in relation to the development of control strategies such as pushpull or stimulo-deterrent diversionary strategies (SDDS). © 1999 Society of Chemical Industry
- Published
- 1999
240. Individual Learning Ability and Complex Odor Recognition in the Honey Bee, Apis melliferaL.
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Laloi, David, Roger, Bernard, Blight, Margaret, Wadhams, Lester, and Pham-Delègue, Minh-Hà
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Individually restrained worker bees were trained to recognize complex odors in a conditioned proboscis extension assay. Three groups of bees were considered, based on the responses recorded during the experimental procedure: selective learners, nonselective learners, and nonlearners. For conditioning, three concentrations of two synthetic mixtures were used. The distribution of bees between groups was not significantly affected by the nature or by the concentration of the conditioning mixture. After conditioning, bees were tested with the individual compounds, and the responses were analyzed with respect to the three groups. Selective learners showed discriminative responses to a few key compounds, while nonselective learners responded to all the compounds, and nonlearners to none. These results showed that complex odor recognition is based on the recognition of key components and relies on the ability of bees to learn.
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- 1999
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241. Efficacy of a surfactant, allantoin, and benzalkonium chloride solution for onychomycosis. Preliminary results of treatment with periodic debridement
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Wadhams, PS, Griffith, J, Nikravesh, P, and Chodosh, D
- Abstract
A 10-month, hospital-based, open-label clinical study was undertaken of a unique antimicrobial nail solution containing surfactant, allantoin, and benzaikonium chloride to determine its effectiveness, in conjunction with periodic debridement, against pedal onychomycosis. Forty patients with microbial infection of the nails were enrolled in this study, in which a new, objective nail-scoring system was used. At the start of the study, the mean nail score was 8.3, and 79.8% of the nails scored had severe disease (on a scale of 0 to 10, with 10 defined as total nail involvement, accompanied by pain and thickening). By the conclusion of the study, the mean score had decreased to 2.5, 32.6% of the patients' nails were scored 0 or 1, and 90% of the patients subjectively judged their improvement as excellent or good.
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- 1999
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242. The Odden ice tongue and Greenland Sea convection
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Wadhams, Peter
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- 1999
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243. Iceberg Severity of Eastern North America: Its Relationship to Sea Ice Variability and Climate Change
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Marko, S. R., Fissel, D. B., Wadhams, P., Kelly, P. M., and Brown, R. D.
- Abstract
AbstractIceberg trajectory, deterioration (mass loss), and sea ice data are reviewed to identify the sources of observed interannual and seasonal variations in the numbers of icebergs passing south of 48°N off eastern North America. The results show the dominant role of sea ice in the observed variations. Important mechanisms involved include both seasonal modulation of the southerly iceberg flow by ice cover control of probabilities for entrapment and decay in shallow water, and the suppression of iceberg meltdeterioration rates by high concentrations of sea ice. The Labrador spring ice extent, shown to be the critical parameter in interannual iceberg number variability, was found to be either determined by or closely correlated with midwinter Davis Strait ice extents. Agreement obtained between observed year-to-year and seasonal number variations with computations based upon a simple iceberg dissipation model suggests that downstream iceberg numbers are relatively insensitive to iceberg production rates and to fluctuations in southerly iceberg fluxes in areas north of Baffin Island. Past variations in the Davis Strait ice index and annual ice extents are studied to identify trends and relationships between regional and larger-scale global climate parameters. It was found that, on decadal timescales in the post-1960 period of reasonable data quality, regional climate parameters have varied, roughly, out of phase with corresponding global and hemispheric changes. These observations are compared with expectations in terms of model results to evaluate current GCM-based capabilities for simulating recent regional behavior.
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- 1994
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244. Identification of Semiochemicals Released During Aphid Feeding That Attract Parasitoid Aphidius ervi
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Du, Yongjun, Poppy, Guy, Powell, Wilf, Pickett, John, Wadhams, Lester, and Woodcock, Christine
- Abstract
Herbivore induced release of plant volatiles mediating the foraging behavior of the aphid parasitoid Aphidius erviwas investigated using the pea aphid, Acyrthosiphon pisum, feeding on broad bean, Vicia faba. Behavioral responses were studied using an olfactometer and a wind tunnel. Volatiles obtained by air entrainment of aphid infested plants were more attractive to A. ervithan those from uninfested plants, in both behavioral bioassays. GC-EAG of both extracts showed a number of peaks associated with responses by A. ervi, but with some differences between extracts. Compounds giving these peaks were tentatively identified by GC-MS and confirmed by comparison with authentic samples on GC, using two columns of different polarity. The activity of pure compounds was further investigated by EAG and wind tunnel assays. Results showed that, of the compounds tested, 6-methyl-5-hepten-2-one was the most attractive for A. ervifemales, with linalool, (Z)-3-hexen-1-yl acetate, (E)-β-ocimene, (Z)-3-hexen-1-ol, and (E)-β-farnesene all eliciting significantly more oriented flight behavior than a solvent control. Foraging experience significantly increased parasitoid responses to these compounds, with the exception of (E)-β-farnesene. Time-course GC analysis showed that feeding of A. pisumon V. fabainduced or increased the release of several compounds. Release of two of these compounds (6-methyl-5-hepten-2-one and geranic acid) was not induced by the nonhost black bean aphid, Aphis fabae. During the analysis period, production of (E)-β-ocimene remained constant, but 6-methyl-5-hepten-2-one, linalool, geranic acid, and (E)-β-farnesene appeared during the first day after A. pisuminfestation and increased in concentration with increasing time of aphid feeding.
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- 1998
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245. Sex Pheromone of Female Vine Bud Moth, Theresimima ampellophagaComprises (2S)-Butyl (7Z)-Tetradecenoate
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Subchev, M., Harizanov, A., Francke, W., Franke, S., Plass, E., Reckziegel, A., Schröder, F., Pickett, J., Wadhams, L., and Woodcock, C.
- Abstract
The sex pheromone of the vine bud moth, Theresimima ampellophaga, released at the 3rd–5th abdominal tergites, was identified by coupled GC-EAG, GC-MS, and synthesis as (2S)-butyl (7Z)-tetradecenoate. For the first time, full stereochemistry is unambiguously defined for the sex pheromone of a member of the Zygaenidae. The synthetic compound caught significant numbers of males in field-trapping experiments.
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- 1998
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246. Response of The Lacewing Chrysopa cognatato Pheromones of its Aphid Prey
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Boo, K., Chung, I., Han, K., Pickett, J., and Wadhams, L.
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The lacewing Chrysopa cognata, one of the principal predators of aphids in Korea, was tested for responses to the aphid sex pheromone components (4aS,7S,7aR)-nepetalactone and (1R,4aS,7S,7aR)-nepetalactol and the aphid alarm pheromone (E)-β-farnesene. Electroantennogram responses were obtained to the sex pheromone components but not to (E)-β-farnesene. The sex pheromone components were attractive in a Y-tube olfactometer assay and in field trials with water traps, but no attraction was observed to (E)-β-farnesene.
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- 1998
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247. Sex Pheromone of Cabbage Aphid Brevicoryne brassicae: Identification and Field Trapping of Male Aphids and Parasitoids
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Gabryś, B., Gadomski, H., Klukowski, Z., Pickett, J., Sobota, G., Wadhams, L., and Woodcock, C.
- Abstract
The sex pheromone of the cabbage aphid, Brevicoryne brassicae, is shown by GC and GC-MS analysis of pheromone entrained from sexual females, and by electrophysiological studies on single cell preparations from male antennae, to comprise (4aS,7S,7aR)-nepetalactone. The compound proved to be attractive in a laboratory bioassay and release of the pheromone from glass vials placed above water traps in crops of autumn brassicaceous crops increased the catch of males of this species. The specialist parasitoid of B. brassicae, Diaeretiella rapae, and the more general aphid parasitoid Praon volucrewere found in significantly larger numbers in pheromone traps as compared to the controls, under certain conditions.
- Published
- 1997
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248. Identification of Floral Volatiles Involved in Recognition of Oilseed Rape Flowers, Brassica napusby Honeybees, Apis mellifera
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Blight, Margaret, Métayer, Martine, Delègue, Minh-Hà, Pickett, John, Marion-Poll, Frédéric, and Wadhams, Lester
- Abstract
Volatiles from oilseed rape, Brassica napus, flowers were sampled by air entrainment and their relevance to the natural odor profile of the flowers was confirmed by conditioned proboscis extension (CPE) assays with honeybee, Apis melliferaL., foragers. Coupled gas chromatography (GC)-CPE analysis of the air entrainment samples was used to locate key compounds involved in the recognition of B. napusflowers, and the compounds were then identified using coupled gas chromatography-mass spectrometry and comparison with authentic samples. Six regions of the gas chromatograms elicited CPE responses from bees previously conditioned to the total extract, and from these areas 16 compounds were identified that elicited CPE activity from conditioned bees when tested with synthetic samples. Eight of the 16, α-pinene, phenylacetaldehyde, p-cymene, α-terpinene, linalool, 2-phenyl-ethanol, (E,E)-α-farnesene, and 3-carene, gave the highest responses. When the bees were conditioned to the total extract of flower volatiles, a mixture of the eight components elicited responses from 83% of the individuals, suggesting that the eight-component mixture accounted for a major part of the CPE activity of the total extract. In addition, a mixture of the three most active compounds, phenylacetaldehyde, linalool, and (E,E,)-α-farnesene, evoked responses from 85% of the bees after the latter had been conditioned to the eight-component mixture. Thus, these three compounds appear to play a key role in the recognition of the eight component mixture and, by inference, of oilseed rape flowers.
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- 1997
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249. The sex pheromone of the grain aphid,Sitobion avenae (Fab.) (Homoptera, Aphididae)
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Lilley, Richard, Hardie, Jim, Merritt, L. A., Pickett, John A., Wadhams, Lester J., and Woodcock, Christine M.
- Abstract
Summary The sex pheromone of the grain aphid,Sitobion avenae (Fab.), is identified as (4aS,7S,7aR)-nepetalactone, for which specific olfactory cells are located in the secondary rhinaria of the male antenna. The related (1R,4aS,7S,7aR)-nepetalactol was not produced by females in significant amounts (ca 10,000-fold less than the nepetalactone), although cells in the male antenna were found that responded specifically to this compound. Behavioural activity in the linear track ol-factometer showed attraction of males to the nepetalactone, but not to the nepetalactol.
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- 1994
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250. Attraction of field-flying aphid males to synthetic sex pheromone
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Hardie, Jim, Nottingham, Stephen F., Dawson, Glenn W., Harrington, Richard, Pickett, John A., and Wadhams, Lester J.
- Abstract
Summary Transparent plastic water traps, baited with the synthetic aphid sex pheromone components (4aS,7S,7aR)-nepetalactone and (1R,4aS,7S,7aR)-nepetalactol or control lures, were placed in four semi-sheltered field sites at a height of 1.1 m. Although males of twenty-one aphid species were collected from the water traps, onlySitobion fragariae (Walker) was abundant. In total, 8 pheromone traps produced 102 males compared with only 10 males in 8 control traps. The sex pheromone released by sexual femaleS. fragariae was identified as the nepetalactone used in the lures. Aphid sex pheromones may be more species-specific than previously thought and the presence of a host plant is not essential for males to locate sexual females.
- Published
- 1992
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