American entomologists studying the effect in the 1940s noted the bed bugs could hardly be induced to move from the leaves
A new very important study in the Journal of Zoology found that the way cats--specifically the European wildcat--mark is intentional and particular.
In 2013 a team of entomologists and agriculture scientists reviewed 77 previous studies about international Bt crops.
I meet Lary Reeves a University of Florida entomologist and graduate student I've come to follow around.
This Peruvian Cyclosa species was found in September 2012 by entomologist Phil Torres. Six months earlier while researching butterfly diversity Reeves discovered a similar spider in the jungles of the Philippines that likewise makes spider-shaped decoys in its web albeit of a slightly different shape.
or their native range in Southern Asia said Darcy Oishi an entomologist for the Hawaii Department of agriculture.
Richard Mankin an entomologist with USDA previously employed sound and vibration detection devices to locate the beetle in Guam.
At this writing there is a convention in Moscow attended by most of the world's profound students and authorities in oceanography oceanology seismology zoology.
The study published this week in Frontiers in Zoology shows that goats can learn rather quickly
#Genetic Pesticides Could Target Individual Speciesif you use a neuro-poison it kills everything Subba Reddy Palli an entomologist at the University of Kentucky who is researching the technology
In the 1970s Torkel Weis-Fogh a Danish zoologist at the University of Cambridge used high-speed photography to analyze the exact wing motions of hovering insects and compare them to the insects morphological features.
Charles Ellington a Cambridge zoologist and former Weis-Fogh student built a robotic wing that could precisely mimic the movements of a hawk moth.
The mangrove forests are edging out salt marshes said University of Maryland Entomology Professor Daniel S. Gruner a study co-author.
Academy scientist Brian Fisher an entomologist who specializes in the study of ants calls them the glue that holds ecosystems together.
but are very difficult to collect says Dr. Dave Kavanaugh Senior Curator of Entomology at the Academy.
Williams the Academy's Curator of Invertebrate Zoology and Geology encountered the sea fan now named Chromoplexaura marki during a two-week survey of the Gulf of the Farallones National Marine Sanctuary
According to the paper published this year in the International Journal of Ichthyology sharks of this genus are nocturnally active bottom-living animals
Thanh-Lan Gluckman is a Phd candidate in the Evolutionary genetics group at the Department of Zoology at the University of Cambridge.
She carried out this research during her MPHIL in the Department of Zoology University of Melbourne Australia.
ECB which was introduced to North america from Europe in the 1900s used to be the most important pest of corn in the United states said John Tooker assistant professor of entomology.
Our results confirm that we are seeing widespread population declines of ECB in the East similar to declines that have been found in the Midwestern United states said Eric Bohnenblust graduate student in entomology.
of Journal of Mammalogy. It suggests that they may be more resistant to climate change than we thought.
since this has huge ramifications for the agriculture industry says Dr. Hannah Burrack an associate professor of entomology at NC State
However small native bees did not have high abundance nor appear to have high visitation rates This highlights the importance of incorporating multiple metrics says Dr. David Tarpy an associate professor of entomology at NC State
Ericaceae) Agroecosystems was published online Nov 25 in the journal Environmental Entomology. Story Source: The above story is provided based on materials by North carolina State university.
However in an article in the Journal of Economic Entomology called Evaluation of Tolerance to Bacillus thuringiensis Toxins Among Laboratory-Reared Western Bean Cutworm (Lepidoptera:
To enable basic and applied research of this important pest Drosophila suzukii we sequenced the genome to obtain a high-quality reference sequence said molecular geneticist Joanna Chiu of the UC Davis Department of Entomology and Nematology.
to OSU entomologist Vaughn Walton and a team of investigators including Professor Frank Zalom of the UC Davis Department of Entomology
and Nematology who is the lead UC Davis investigator. Zalom recently inducted as president of the nearly 7000-member Entomological Society of America said that the G3 article presents a high-quality reference sequence of Drosophila suzukii examination of the basic properties of its genome
and cast Joanna Chiu as a central figure in future Drosophila suzukii genomic studies related to topics such as insecticide detoxification odorant reception and regulatory entomology Zalom
OSU entomologist Vaughn Walton lead investigator of the USDA grant said: Scientists from all over the world are interested in knowledge locked inside the fly's genetic material.
and the Frank Zalom lab both in Department of Entomology and Nematology and David Begun's drosophila evolutionary genetics lab in the Department of Evolution and Ecology.
and Zoological Society or London warns that the world's largest tropical desert the Sahara has suffered a catastrophic collapse of its wildlife populations.
) African Wildlife Foundation Zoological Society of Milwaukee World Wildlife Fund Max Planck Institute Lukuru Foundation University of Stirling Kyoto University and other groups.
Nadir Erbilgin associate professor and Canada Research Chair in Forest Entomology in the U of A's Department of Renewable Resources has been investigating pheromones--airborne chemical compounds that trigger a social response among individuals
We usually think of animals'chemical signals (called pheromones) as communication systems that convey only very simple sorts of information said Christina Grozinger professor of entomology and director of the Center for Pollinator Research Penn State.
and less manoeuvrable so that they are more likely to be caught by predators'said Damien Farine of Oxford university's Department of Zoology who led the research.'
#Elusive bay cat caught on camerathe world's least known cat has been caught on camera in a previously unsurveyed rainforest by scientists from the Zoological Society of London (ZSL) and Imperial College London.
The above story is provided based on materials by Zoological Society of London. Note: Materials may be edited for content and length.
Dorothee Huchon of TAU's Department of Zoology have found that unlike the Near Eastern wild boars in surrounding countries Israel's wild boars originated in Europe.
Foundation the Disney Worldwide Conservation Fund the Cleveland Metroparks Zoo and Cleveland Zoological Society the Andean Bear Conservation Alliance Woodland Park Zoo and other generous
and ant specialist Phil Ward professor of entomology at UC Davis. Despite great interest in the ecology and behavior of these insects their evolutionary relationships have never been clarified fully.
of Entomology and Nematology and visiting scientist Ernest K. Lee of the Sackler Institute for Comparative Genomics American Museum of Natural history.
Bats which are important reservoir hosts for many pathogens particularly viruses have been hosts to malaria parasites for more than a century said coauthor Susan Perkins an associate curator in the Museum's Division of Invertebrate Zoology.
However a new study published in the Journal of Economic Entomology suggests that Bt sweet corn is better for the environment
Across multiple states and multiple years Bt sweet corn performed better and required fewer sprays to meet market standards said Cornell entomology professor Anthony Shelton.
Now a research team led by entomologists at the University of California Riverside has published a study that focuses on an anthropogenic pollutant:
and can even be deposited atmospherically on the hive itself said Kristen Hladun the lead author of the study and a postdoctoral entomologist.
which olfactory receptor insects used to avoid DEET said Anandasankar Ray an associate professor of entomology who led the research team.
and found catching ladders and supporting webs of juveniles inside of itcomments the lead author of the study Peter Michalik Zoological Institute
The scientists acknowledged funding from the Memphis Zoological Society in addition to past funding from the Mississippi Corn Promotion Board the U s. Department of energy and Southeastern Research center at Mississippi State.
He is an emeritus professor of entomology at Virginia Tech and an authority on colony decline in bees.
and Hydrology (CEH) University of East Anglia University of Bristol and Institute of Zoology instead took advantage of bumblebees'unusual genetics.
of Zoology. The research is funded by the national Insect Pollinators Initiative. Story Source: The above story is provided based on materials by British Ecological Society (BES.
In an article published recently in the American Ornithologist Union's publication The Auk research wildlife biologist Scott Stoleson of the U s. Forest Service's Northern Research Station suggests that forest regrowth in clearcuts
The study appears in the July issue of the Journal of Zoology. Authors include: Steven Platt of the Wildlife Conservation Society;
Dr Claire Spottiswoode from the University of Cambridge's Department of Zoology who carried out the research said:
With confirmation of the olinguito's existence via a few seconds of grainy video shot by their colleague Miguel Pinto a zoologist in Ecuador Helgen
In 1920 a zoologist in New york thought an olinguito museum specimen was so unusual that it might be a new species
Logistical and financial support for this study was provided by the Amur-Ussuri Centre for Avian Diversity with additional funding from the Bell Museum of Natural history Columbus Zoo Conservation Fund Denver Zoological Foundation
In a study published this week in the journal Biological Invasions U s. Forest Service entomologist Andrew Liebhold
Data used in the study were collected by volunteers for Project Feederwatch a Cornell Lab of Ornithology and Bird Studies Canada project in
--and gradually spreading in the state said UC Davis entomology professor James Carey an international authority on fruit-fly invasion biology
and speaks to the urgent need to alter current eradication policies aimed at invasive species said horticultural entomologist Michael Parrella professor and chair of the UC Davis Department of Entomology and Nematology.
Frank Zalom incoming president of the Entomological Society of America and a UC Davis entomology professor said the new study provides a careful and systematic analysis of fruit-fly finds
Carey collaborated with lead study author Nikos Papadopoulos an entomologist at the University of Thessaly Greece and Richard Plant a UC Davis professor emeritus of plant sciences and biological and agricultural engineering.
and the number of cohorts that appeared each season we had no clear understanding of the difference between distinct and continuous reproduction said Ottar N. Bjã¸rnstad professor of entomology biology and statistics Penn State.
when viewed under a microscope says entomologist Jack Longino a professor of biology. Their faces are broad shields the eyes reduced to tiny points at the edges and the fierce jaws bristling with sharp teeth.
The research published in the American Journal of Primatology found that it is common for orangutans to come down from the trees to forage
The research published in the American Journal of Primatology found that it is common for orangutans to come down from the trees to forage
Wang's multiple gene knockdown method is a first in entomology and it overcomes the many shortfalls associated with typical single-gene targeting methods A common problem associated with single gene suppression is that it is not sufficient to show the interrelationship of a gene network.
The research is published in the July issue of the Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society.
Carole Baldwin a zoologist at the Smithsonian's National Museum of Natural history examined more than 200 species of marine fishes in their larval stage primarily from the western Caribbean.
and 65 percent of the insect and pathogen invaders included in this study colonize hardwood tree species said Liebhold a research entomologist with the U s. Forest Service's Northern Research Station.
Monica Turner the Eugene P. Odum Professor of Zoology and graduate student Jiangxiao Qiu mapped the production distribution and interactions of the services in three main categories:
These insects they have only one generation per year said University of Illinois entomology department senior scientist Manfredo Seufferheld who led the study.
and The british Trust for Ornithology (BTO) has found that feeding wild blue tits in winter resulted in less successful breeding during the following spring.
what that impact may be says Dr. David Tarpy an associate professor of entomology at North carolina State university
Bruce Tabashnik and Yves Carriã re in the department of entomology at the College of Agriculture and Life sciences together with visiting scholar Thierry Br vault from the Center for Agricultural Research for Development
and evolve resistance said Tabashnik head of the UA department of entomology who led the study.
Fred Gould professor of entomology at North carolina State university commented: It's great to have an up-to-date comprehensive review of
The study carried out by the Zoological Society of London (ZSL) describes how forests converted to palm oil plantations are causing threatened forest dwelling frogs to vanish resulting in an overall loss of habitat that is important for the conservation of threatened frog
Aisyah Faruk Phd student at ZSL's Institute of Zoology says: The impact we observed is different from that observed previously for mammals and birds.
The above story is provided based on materials by Zoological Society of London. Note: Materials may be edited for content and length.
Wouter Van dongen and colleagues from the Konrad Lorenz Institute of Ethology of the Vetmeduni Vienna have collaborated with scientists from the Laboratoire Ãolution
and Jessica Schnell recently graduated now at the Max Planck Institute for Ornithology Germany. More accurate habitat maps show the extent of fragmentation
This discovery gives us an important lead in figuring out how honey bees are able to navigate so well with such a tiny brain said Gene Robinson a professor of entomology
#Bechsteins bat is more Mediterranean than originally thoughtalthough the Bechstein's bat is regarded as a Euro-Siberian species a study by researchers in the UPV/EHU's Department of Zoology
now a University of Florida entomologist wants to improve the netting by coating it with insecticide toxic only to mosquitoes.
but affect a broad range of species said entomologist Jeff Bloomquist a professor in UF's Emerging Pathogens Institute and its Institute of food and agricultural sciences.
whether botanical zoological or microbiological and have been named officially during 2012. Selecting the final list of new species from a wide representation of life forms such as bacteria fungi plants
and the special insights revealed by selection committee members said Antonio Valdecasas a biologist and research zoologist with Museo Nacional de Ciencias Naturales in Madrid Spain.
and shared his photo on Flickr. Shaun Winterton an entomologist with the California Department of Food
Scientists of the Konrad-Lorenz-Institute of Ethology of the Vetmeduni Vienna for the first time tried to experimentally test the behaviour of reed warblers (Acrocephalus scirpaceus) after a potential act of cheating by the female.
The results were striking said Lessando Gontijo who led the research project while a doctoral student in the WSU Department of Entomology.
and roots said Betsy Beers an entomologist based at WSU's Tree Fruit Research and Extension Center in Wenatchee and Gontijo's mentor and co-author on the paper.
The results were striking said Lessando Gontijo who led the research project while a doctoral student in the WSU Department of Entomology.
and roots said Betsy Beers an entomologist based at WSU's Tree Fruit Research and Extension Center in Wenatchee and Gontijo's mentor and co-author on the paper.
but these two innovative studies slated to publish in upcoming editions of the Journal of Herpetology
University of Illinois professor of entomology May Berenbaum who led the study said that many organisms use a group of enzymes called cytochrome P450 monooxygenases to break down foreign substances such as pesticides
APEIR researchers including Professor Lei Fumin of the Institute of Zoology of the Chinese Academy of Sciences are currently investigating the possible role of wild birds in transmission of H7n9 avian influenza.
Beyond a better understanding of fishes themselves the potential implications of this research are said wide reaching Edward Wiley curator of ichthyology at the University of Kansas. Our knowledge about one group can be extended to closely related species
And soybeans are grown almost everywhere says Dr. Dominic Reisig an assistant professor of entomology at NC State
and abstract thinking in humans says Christophe Boesch director of the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology's Department of Primatology.
Doctoral student Megan Szyndler entomologist Catherine Loudon and chemist Robert Corn of UC Irvine and entomologists Kenneth Haynes and Michael Potter of the University of Kentucky collaborated on the new study.
Researchers from the Max Planck Institute for Ornithology in Seewiesen have examined whether the presence of an audience influences the behaviour and the testosterone changes of Japanese quails (Coturnix japonica) after a fight.
With support of the Alexander-Von-humboldt Society scientists working with Katharina Hirschenhauser from the Max Planck Institute for Ornithology in Seewiesen have been studying the influence of mixed-sex audiences on future social status after a fight.
The above story is provided based on materials by Max Planck Institute for Ornithology. Note: Materials may be edited for content and length.
and the Zoological Society of London (ZSL) have discovered why bees copy each other when looking for nectar
but it's something that almost any animal could do in the right circumstances says Dr Elli Leadbeater from ZSL's Institute for Zoology.
and Food Research Initiative and is led by entomologist Diane Ullman of the University of California Davis
unless better preventive actions are taken suggests new research by University of Arizona entomologists published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
and the environment explained Yves Carriã re a professor of entomology in the UA College of Agriculture
if pests adapt rapidly said Bruce Tabashnik a co-author of the study and head of the UA department of entomology.
The above story is provided based on materials by Zoological Society of San diego. Note: Materials may be edited for content and length.
Funded by a grant from the German Research Foundation the study is published in the March 26 online issue of the International Journal of Primatology.
study findsa female great tits'(Parus major) appearance is shown to signal healthy attributes in offspring in a paper in Biomed Central's open access journal Frontiers in Zoology.
and AD&T research assistant professor Scott Egan discuss in a new study in the Journal of Economic Entomology the WSDA sent larvae samples to Wee Yee research entomologist at the USDA's Yakima Agricultural
and help identify new crops that might be at risk says Dr. Hannah Burrack an assistant professor of entomology at NC State
Animal scientists Rod Johnson and Ryan Dilger have developed a model of the pig brain that they plan to use to answer important questions about human brain development.
) Dian Fossey Gorilla Foundation International the Jane Goodall Institute Lukuru Foundation Zoological Society of London Fauna and Flora International Max Planck Institute San diego
Fossey Gorilla Foundation International Espã ces Phares (European union) Ecosystã mes Forestiers d'Afrique Centrale ECOFAC) Fauna and Flora International Frankfurt Zoological
International Development (USAID CARPE) USFWS Great ape Conservation Fund USFWS African elephant Conservation Fund Wildlife Conservation Society World Wildlife Fund and the Zoological Society
of which lacked preexisting capabilities in this area said John Ascher a research scientist in the Museum's Division of Invertebrate Zoology
Historically we've seen symptoms similar to IBDS associated with viruses spread by large-scale infestations of parasitic mites says Dr. David Tarpy an associate professor of entomology at North carolina State university
Meanwhile Zanzibar's red colobus monkey--driven to coastal mangroves by deforestation--can struggle to find the freshwater it needs as Nowak reported in the American Journal of Primatology in 2008.
So respected is he among entomologists that roughly 20 additional species have been named for him. Robertson's meticulous database is probably the oldest of its type for flower-visiting insects.
conservation in Central africa the United nations educational scientific and cultural organization (UNESCO) and the Zoological Society of London (ZSL. Story Source:
#Decoys could blunt spread of ash-killing beetlesas the emerald ash borer ravages North american ash trees threatening the trees'very survival a team of entomologists
Thomas C. Baker Distinguished Professor of Entomology at Penn State knew that the male EAB locates a mate by flying over an ash tree finding a female by identifying her green wings
--and it is--then it could be the next major invasive ant species says Dr. Jules Silverman a professor of entomology at NC State
Insects groom themselves incessantly so NC State entomologist Coby Schal and postdoctoral researchers Katalin Boroczky and Ayako Wada-Katsumata wanted to explore the functions of this behavior.
and Southern America for ten years and they have published now their results in the Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society.
According to the entomologist hoverflies are present in practically all terrestrial ecosystems and they carry out very important biological functions such as pollination nutrient recycling
By giving a more detailed description of how the disease moves across the landscape the study opens the door to management efforts that might bring the disease under control says David Crowder a WSU entomologist and the paper's lead author.
Crowder working with fellow entomologist Jeb Owen other WSU colleagues and the State department of Health merged data from a variety of sources including West Nile infections in humans horses
The WCS findings were described in the December issue of the journal Integrative Zoology. Authors include Robert Wallace Guido Ayala and Maria Viscara of WCS's Greater Madidi-Tambopata Landscape Program.
and leading to increased'stress'levels as detected through hormone analysis. The research published January 22 in the International Journal of Primatology took place in the tropical rainforests of the Mexican state of Veracruz
A report published January 11 in Remote Sensing by scientists from the Zoological Society of London (ZSL) states that as human development thrives
The above story is provided based on materials by Zoological Society of London. Note: Materials may be edited for content and length h
of Ornithology. No previous attempts to understand the evolutionary history of this group have included genetic samples from nearly all the existing species. Berv began sequencing DNA samples
The results are published in an article in the Journal of Economic Entomology. The nonsynthetic bed bug pesticides--which contain ingredients such as geraniol rosemary oil mint oil cinnamon oil peppermint oil eugenol clove oil lemongrass oil sodium lauryl sulfate
Monica Turner UW-Madison professor of zoology and study lead author Peter Blank a postdoctoral researcher in her lab hope the findings help drive decisions that benefit both birds
which they describe in an ad hoc study in the Journal of Medical Entomology. The authors hope that their paper will fill a knowledge gap
In a study published this week in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences UW-Madison zoology professor Monica Turner
The review led by UC Davis animal scientist Alison Van Eenennaam examined nearly 30 years of livestock-feeding studies that represent more than 100 billion animals.
but predators may want to give some thought to wind according to a University of Wisconsin Madison zoologist's study
what the U s. Department of agriculture Forest Service claims to be the most destructive forest pest ever seen in North america said Michael Domingue postdoctoral fellow in entomology Penn State.
The researchers--including entomologists and engineers at Penn State the Hungarian Academy of Sciences the Forest Research Institute in Matrafured Hungary and the USDA--created the decoys using a bioreplication process with nanoscale fidelity.
Next the entomology researchers pinned the bioreplicated and 3d printed decoys as well as dead female emerald ash borers onto leaves in forests in Hungary to see which of them best attracted wild males.
and Research Entomologist Mark Deyrup with the Archbold Biological Station in Florida identified each prey item to the lowest taxonomic level
but we think we've identified where in the world new roads would be most environmentally damaging said co-author Professor Andrew Balmford from the University of Cambridge's Department of Zoology.
The immediate question to ornithologists or to anybody who has a birdfeeder in the backyard was:
A doctoral student in organismic and evolutionary biology and Museum of Comparative Zoology she is a member of the lab of Scott Edwards Professor of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology and Curator of Ornithology in the Museum of Comparative Zoology.
Representing organizations such as the US-based Wildlife Conservation Society the Zoological Society of London the Geos Institute
The new research follows up on previous work from the laboratory of University of Illinois entomology professor
Daniel Rubinoff entomologist and director of the University of Hawaii Insect Museum said the new study will help scientists conclusively pinpoint where butterflies belong in evolutionary history--a question that has troubled long researchers.
other new methods to rapidly identify pathogenshe calls himself the bug hunter but the target of his work consists of viruses that can only be found
and Herbert Hoi from the Konrad Lorenz Institute of Ethology at the Vetmeduni Vienna are interested in the effects of light-at-night in wild birds.
headed by Katharina Mahr from the Konrad Lorenz Institute of Ethology at the Vetmeduni Veinna is supported by the Hochschuljubilã¤umsstiftung of the City of Vienna.
We wanted to look at the most important pest species of the most common tree species in urban areas of the southeastern United states says Dr. Steve Frank an assistant professor of entomology at NC State and senior author of the papers.
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