Publications
218 results found
Raymond B, Wright DJ, Crickmore N, et al., 2013, The impact of strain diversity and mixed infections on the evolution of resistance to Bacillus thuringiensis, Proceedings of the Royal Society B-Biological Sciences, Vol: in press
Clewley GD, Eschen R, Shaw RH, et al., 2012, The effectiveness of classical biological control of invasive plants, JOURNAL OF APPLIED ECOLOGY, Vol: 49, Pages: 1287-1295, ISSN: 0021-8901
- Author Web Link
- Cite
- Citations: 82
Banfield-Zanin JA, Rossiter JT, Wright DJ, et al., 2012, Predator mortality depends on whether its prey feeds on organic or conventionally fertilised plants, BIOLOGICAL CONTROL, Vol: 63, Pages: 56-61, ISSN: 1049-9644
- Author Web Link
- Cite
- Citations: 7
Stafford DB, Tariq M, Wright DJ, et al., 2012, Opposing effects of organic and conventional fertilizers on the performance of a generalist and a specialist aphid species, AGRICULTURAL AND FOREST ENTOMOLOGY, Vol: 14, Pages: 270-275, ISSN: 1461-9555
- Author Web Link
- Cite
- Citations: 16
Pope TW, Girling RD, Staley JT, et al., 2012, Effects of organic and conventional fertilizer treatments on host selection by the aphid parasitoid Diaeretiella rapae, JOURNAL OF APPLIED ENTOMOLOGY, Vol: 136, Pages: 445-455, ISSN: 0931-2048
- Author Web Link
- Cite
- Citations: 19
Gulzar A, Pickett B, Sayyed AH, et al., 2012, Effect of Temperature on the Fitness of a Vip3A Resistant Population of <i>Heliothis virescens</i> (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae), JOURNAL OF ECONOMIC ENTOMOLOGY, Vol: 105, Pages: 964-970, ISSN: 0022-0493
- Author Web Link
- Cite
- Citations: 21
Tariq M, Wright DJ, Rossiter JT, et al., 2012, Aphids in a changing world: testing the plant stress, plant vigour and pulsed stress hypotheses, AGRICULTURAL AND FOREST ENTOMOLOGY, Vol: 14, Pages: 177-185, ISSN: 1461-9555
- Author Web Link
- Cite
- Citations: 75
Bailly GC, Dale RP, Archer SA, et al., 2012, Role of residual herbicides for the management of multiple herbicide resistance to ACCase and ALS inhibitors in a black-grass population, CROP PROTECTION, Vol: 34, Pages: 96-103, ISSN: 0261-2194
- Author Web Link
- Cite
- Citations: 36
Girling RD, Stewart-Jones A, Dherbecourt J, et al., 2011, Parasitoids select plants more heavily infested with their caterpillar hosts: a new approach to aid interpretation of plant headspace volatiles, PROCEEDINGS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES, Vol: 278, Pages: 2646-2653, ISSN: 0962-8452
- Author Web Link
- Cite
- Citations: 62
Garratt MPD, Wright DJ, Leather SR, 2011, The effects of farming system and fertilisers on pests and natural enemies: A synthesis of current research, AGRICULTURE ECOSYSTEMS & ENVIRONMENT, Vol: 141, Pages: 261-270, ISSN: 0167-8809
- Author Web Link
- Cite
- Citations: 98
Staley JT, Stafford DB, Green ER, et al., 2011, Plant nutrient supply determines competition between phytophagous insects, PROCEEDINGS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES, Vol: 278, Pages: 718-724, ISSN: 0962-8452
- Author Web Link
- Cite
- Citations: 21
Raymond B, Wright DJ, Bonsall MB, 2011, Effects of host plant and genetic background on the fitness costs of resistance to Bacillus thuringiensis, Heredity, Vol: 106, Pages: 281-288
Novel resistance to pathogens and pesticides is commonly associated with a fitness cost. However, measurements of the fitness costs of insecticide resistance have used diverse methods to control for genetic background and rarely assess the effects of environmental variation. Here, we explored how genetic background interacts with resource quality to affect the expression of the fitness costs associated with resistance. We used a serially backcrossed line of the diamondback moth, Plutella xylostella, resistant to the biopesticide Bacillus thuringiensis, to estimate the costs of resistance for insects feeding on two Brassica species. We found that fitness costs increased on the better-defended Brassica oleracea cultivars. These data were included in two meta-analyses of fitness cost experiments that used standardized protocols (and a common resistant insect stock) but which varied in the methodology used to control for the effects of genetic background. The meta-analysis confirmed that fitness costs were higher on the low-quality host (B. oleracea); and experimental methodology did not influence estimates of fitness costs on that plant species. In contrast, fitness costs were heterogeneous in the Brassica pekinensis studies: fitness costs in genetically homogenized lines were significantly higher than in studies using revertant insects. We hypothesize that fitness modifiers can moderate fitness costs on high-quality plants but may not affect fitness when resource quality is low.
Staley JT, Girling RD, Stewart-Jones A, et al., 2011, Organic and conventionalfertilizer effects on a tri-trophic interaction: parasitism, performance and preference of Cotesia vestalis, Journal of Applied Entomology, Vol: 135, Pages: 658-665
Garbutt J, Bonsall MB, Wright DJ, et al., 2011, Antagonistic competition moderates virulence in Bacillus thuringiensis, Ecology Letters, Vol: 14, Pages: 765-772
Rodriguez-Cabrera L, Trujillo-Bacallao D, Borras-Hidalgo O, et al., 2010, RNAi-mediated knockdown of a <i>Spodoptera frugiperda</i> trypsin-like serine-protease gene reduces susceptibility to a <i>Bacillus thuringiensis</i> Cry1Ca1 protoxin, ENVIRONMENTAL MICROBIOLOGY, Vol: 12, Pages: 2894-2903, ISSN: 1462-2912
- Author Web Link
- Cite
- Citations: 45
Garratt MPD, Wright DJ, Leather SR, 2010, The effects of organic and conventional fertilizers on cereal aphids and their natural enemies, AGRICULTURAL AND FOREST ENTOMOLOGY, Vol: 12, Pages: 307-318, ISSN: 1461-9555
- Author Web Link
- Cite
- Citations: 33
Garratt MPD, Leather SR, Wright DJ, 2010, Tritrophic effects of organic and conventional fertilisers on a cereal-aphid-parasitoid system (vol 134, pg 211, 2010), ENTOMOLOGIA EXPERIMENTALIS ET APPLICATA, Vol: 135, Pages: 119-119, ISSN: 0013-8703
Staley JT, Stewart-Jones A, Pope TW, et al., 2010, Varying responses of insect herbivores to altered plant chemistry under organic and conventional treatments, PROCEEDINGS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES, Vol: 277, Pages: 779-786, ISSN: 0962-8452
- Author Web Link
- Cite
- Citations: 45
Garratt MPD, Leather SR, Wright DJ, 2010, Tritrophic effects of organic and conventional fertilisers on a cereal-aphid-parasitoid system, ENTOMOLOGIA EXPERIMENTALIS ET APPLICATA, Vol: 134, Pages: 211-219, ISSN: 0013-8703
- Author Web Link
- Cite
- Citations: 34
Tariq M, Wright DJ, Staley JT, 2010, Maternal host plant effects on aphid performance: contrasts between a generalist and a specialist species on Brussels sprout cultivars, AGRICULTURAL AND FOREST ENTOMOLOGY, Vol: 12, Pages: 107-112, ISSN: 1461-9555
- Author Web Link
- Cite
- Citations: 9
Martinou AF, Raymond B, Milonas PG, et al., 2010, Impact of intraguild predation on parasitoid foraging behaviour, Ecological Entomology, Vol: 35, Pages: 183-189
Staley JT, Stewart-Jones A, Poppy GM, et al., 2009, Fertilizer affects the behaviour and performance of <i>Plutella xylostella</i> on brassicas, AGRICULTURAL AND FOREST ENTOMOLOGY, Vol: 11, Pages: 275-282, ISSN: 1461-9555
- Author Web Link
- Cite
- Citations: 28
Martinou AF, Milonas PG, Wright DJ, 2009, Patch residence decisions made by <i>Aphidius</i> <i>colemani</i> in the presence of a facultative predator, BIOLOGICAL CONTROL, Vol: 49, Pages: 234-238, ISSN: 1049-9644
- Author Web Link
- Cite
- Citations: 12
Martinou AF, Wright DJ, 2009, The predation consequence of continuous breeding vs starting a new colony of a polyphagous insect predator, PHYTOPARASITICA, Vol: 37, Pages: 27-33, ISSN: 0334-2123
- Author Web Link
- Cite
- Citations: 1
Raymond B, Johnston PR, Wright DJ, et al., 2009, A mid-gut microbiota is not required for the pathogenicity of Bacillus thuringiensis to diamondback moth larvae, Environmental Microbiology, Vol: 11, Pages: 2556-2563
Raymond B, Wright DJ, 2009, Resistance management of transgenic insect resistant crops: ecological factors, Environmental impact of genetically modified crops, Editors: Ferry, Gatehouse, Wallingford, UK, Publisher: CABI, Pages: 101-114
Sayyed AH, Moores G, Crickmore N, et al., 2008, Cross-resistance between a <i>Bacillus</i> <i>thuringiensis</i> Cry toxin and non-<i>Bt</i> insecticides in the diamondback moth, PEST MANAGEMENT SCIENCE, Vol: 64, Pages: 813-819, ISSN: 1526-498X
- Author Web Link
- Cite
- Citations: 34
Rodriguez-Cabrera L, Trujillo-Bacallao D, Borras-Hidalgo O, et al., 2008, Molecular characterization of <i>Spodoptera frugiperda</i> <i>Bacillus thuringiensis</i> Cry1Ca toxin interaction, TOXICON, Vol: 51, Pages: 681-692, ISSN: 0041-0101
- Author Web Link
- Cite
- Citations: 16
Karimzadeh J, Wright DJ, 2008, Bottom-up cascading effects in a tritrophic system: interactions between plant quality and host-parasitoid immune responses, ECOLOGICAL ENTOMOLOGY, Vol: 33, Pages: 45-52, ISSN: 0307-6946
- Author Web Link
- Cite
- Citations: 39
Martinou AF, Wright DJ, 2007, Host instar and host plant effects on <i>Aphidius colemani</i>, JOURNAL OF APPLIED ENTOMOLOGY, Vol: 131, Pages: 621-624, ISSN: 0931-2048
- Author Web Link
- Cite
- Citations: 12
This data is extracted from the Web of Science and reproduced under a licence from Thomson Reuters. You may not copy or re-distribute this data in whole or in part without the written consent of the Science business of Thomson Reuters.