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Full Description
In Virus-Insect-Plant Interactions, the world's leading scientists discuss the latest breakthroughs in understanding the biological and ecological factors that define these complex transmission systems and how this knowledge might be used to our advantage in producing innovative, user and environmentally friendly approaches to controlling the spread of plant pathogens by insects. This is an invaluable reference work for researchers, teachers, and students. There are many quick-reference figures and tables, the contents pages include individual chapter abstracts, and each chapter ends with its own bibliography.
Contents
Part I: Virus Localization in Plants and Vectors
1. Tomato Yellow Leaf Curi Virus: A Disease Sexually Transmitted by Whiteflies
2. Possible Etiology of Eriophyid Mite-Borne Pathogens Associated with Double Membrane-Bound Particles
3. An Anatomical Perspective of Tospovirus Transmission
Part II: Elucidation of Transmission Mechanisms
4. Analysis of Circulative Transmission by Electrical Penetration Graphs
5. Analysis of Noncirculative Transmission by Electrical Penetration Graphs
6. Ingestion-Egestion Theory of Cuticula-Bome Virus Transmission
7. Mechanism of Virus Transmission by Leaf-Feeding Beetles
Part III: Molecular Aspects of Virus-Vector Interaction
8. Caulimoviruses
9. Cucumoviruses
10. Potyviruses
11. Viral Determinants Involved in Luteovirus-Aphid Interactions
12. Approaches to Genetic Engineering of Potato for Resistance to Potato Leafroll Virus
Part IV: Ecology, Epidemiology, and Control
13. Bemisia: Pest Status, Economics, Biology, and Population Dynamics
14. Whitefly-Bome Viruses in Continental Europe
15. Transmission Properties of Whitefly-Bome Criniviruses and their Impact on Virus Epidemiology
16. Classical Biological Control of Bemisia and Successful Integration of Management Strategies in the United States 17. Interference with Ultraviolet Vision of Insects to Impede Insect Pests and Insect-Borne Plant Viruses
18. Bionomics of Micrutalis malleifera Fowler and Its Transmission of Pseudo-Curly Top Virus