T C Turlings
Overview
Explore the profile of T C Turlings including associated specialties, affiliations and a list of published articles.
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Articles
12
Citations
1021
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0
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Recent Articles
1.
Turlings T, Scheepmaker J, Vet L, Tumlinson J, Lewis W
J Chem Ecol
. 2013 Nov;
16(5):1577-89.
PMID: 24263828
Responses of individual females of the parasitoidCotesia marginiventris to the odors of four different complexes of host larvae feeding on leaves were observed in a four-arm olfactometer. The plant-host complexes...
2.
Turlings T, Tumlinson J, Heath R, Proveaux A, Doolittle R
J Chem Ecol
. 2013 Nov;
17(11):2235-51.
PMID: 24258602
Volatiles released from corn seedlings on which beet armyworm larvae were feeding were attractive to females of the parasitoid,Cotesia marginiventris (Cresson), in flight tunnel bioassays. Analyses of the collected volatiles...
3.
Turlings T, McCall P, Alborn H, Tumlinson J
J Chem Ecol
. 2013 Nov;
19(3):411-25.
PMID: 24248945
Regurgitate of corn-fed beet armyworm (BAW) caterpillars,Spodoptera exigua, when applied to damaged sites of corn (Zea mays) seedlings, causes the release of relatively large amounts of terpenes by the seedlings...
4.
McCall P, Turlings T, Loughrin J, Proveaux A, Tumlinson J
J Chem Ecol
. 2013 Nov;
20(12):3039-50.
PMID: 24241975
The effect of herbivory on the composition of the volatile blends released by cotton seedlings was investigated by collecting volatiles from undamaged, freshly damaged (0-2 hr after initiation of feeding),...
5.
Chattopadhayay J, Sarkar R, Turlings T, Bersier L
J Theor Biol
. 2002 Feb;
212(3):295-302.
PMID: 11829351
The present paper deals with the problem of enhancement of plant fitness due to parasitization of herbivores. The experimental evidence for such situations is reviewed. Two mathematical models, plant-herbivore (two...
6.
Kalberer N, Turlings T, Rahier M
J Chem Ecol
. 2001 Jul;
27(4):647-61.
PMID: 11446291
Early in spring, just after the snow melts, the leaf beetle Oreina cacaliae feeds on flowers of Petasites paradoxus. Later in spring they switch to their principle host plant Adenostyles...
7.
Turlings T, Fritzsche M
Novartis Found Symp
. 1999 Nov;
223:21-32; discussion 32-8.
PMID: 10549546
Plant volatiles emitted in response to herbivory have been suggested to function as signals to attract natural enemies of herbivores. Most known examples of induced plant volatiles used by natural...
8.
Turlings T, Loughrin J, McCall P, Rose U, Lewis W, Tumlinson J
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A
. 1995 May;
92(10):4169-74.
PMID: 7753779
Parasitic and predatory arthropods often prevent plants from being severely damaged by killing herbivores as they feed on the plants. Recent studies show that a variety of plants, when injured...
9.
Stowe M, Turlings T, Loughrin J, Lewis W, Tumlinson J
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A
. 1995 Jan;
92(1):23-8.
PMID: 7816823
Arthropods that prey on or parasitize other arthropods frequently employ those chemical cues that reliably indicate the presence of their prey or hosts. Eavesdropping on the sex pheromone signals emitted...
10.
Loughrin J, Manukian A, Heath R, Turlings T, Tumlinson J
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A
. 1994 Dec;
91(25):11836-40.
PMID: 11607499
Cotton plants attacked by herbivorous insect pests emit relatively large amounts of characteristic volatile terpenoids that have been implicated in the attraction of natural enemies of the herbivores. However, the...