Journal of the Entomological Society of British Columbia
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    1660 research outputs found

    A winter crane-fly, Trichocera annulata, at Vernon, B.C. (Diptera: Trichoceridae)

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    An unusual cutworm outbreak

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    Coleopterists and Coleoptera collections in the Pacific Northwest

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    A comparison of potato tuber damage by two flea beetles: Epitrix tuberis Gent and Epitrix subcrinita Lee.

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    Applied entomology in the orchards of British Columbia, 1900-1951

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    The Entomological Society of Canada

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    The effect of certain insecticides on the germination and growth of onions, II: Insecticides applied to the seed

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    Efficacy of diamide, neonicotinoid, pyrethroid, and phenyl pyrazole insecticide seed treatments for controlling the sugar beet wireworm, Limonius californicus (Coleoptera: Elateridae), in spring wheat

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    Four classes of insecticide applied on seed were evaluated for managing high populations of the sugar beet wireworm, Limonius californicus (Coleoptera: Elateridae), in spring wheat in southern Alberta, Canada. Three separate field trials were conducted, and assessments made for stand protection, yield, and wireworm survival. Imidacloprid and thiamethoxam applied at 10–30 g AI and cyantraniliprole applied at 10–40 g AI provided initial stand protection, but did not protect seedlings until harvest and did not decrease wireworm populations. λ-cyhalothrin applied at 30 g AI provided stand protection that persisted until harvest, but yields were considerably lower than observed in fipronil treatments and there was little (23%) decrease in populations relative to controls. Fipronil applied at 0.6, 1.0, and 5.0 g AI, either singly or in blend with thiamethoxam at 10 g AI, provided stand protection until harvest and significantly reduced numbers of wireworms larger than 10 mm (range: 74–96%). Very low numbers of small (<11 mm) wireworms were observed in all trials. These results are compared to data from laboratory and field studies for this and other wireworm species. The relation between crop stand protection and wireworm mortality, the potential of insecticide blends, and the importance of seed type, wireworm species, and activity periods for managing wireworms with seed treatments are discussed

    Notes on the Life Histories of Four Species of Moths (Lepidoptera: Phalaenidae) Indigenous to Vancouver Island, British Columbia

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    Another Record of Urinary Myiasis by Fannia canicularis (L.)

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    Journal of the Entomological Society of British Columbia
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