Searching for Defensive Chemistry in the Cruciferae, or, Do Glucosinolates Always Control Interactions of Cruciferae with Their Potential Herbivores and Symbionts? No!
- 1 January 1988
- book chapter
- Published by Elsevier
Abstract
No abstract availableThis publication has 99 references indexed in Scilit:
- ATYPICAL SECONDARY COMPOUNDS IN THE FAMILY CRUCIFERAE: TESTS FOR TOXICITY TO PIERIS RAPAE, AND ADAPTED CRUCIFER-FEEDING INSECTEntomologia Experimentalis et Applicata, 1983
- Ecological patterns in the glucosinolate content of a native mustard,Cardamine cordifolia, in the rocky mountainsJournal of Chemical Ecology, 1983
- Cell wall architectures in a mycorrhizal association as revealed by cryoultramicrotomyProtoplasma, 1982
- The Nutritional Ecology of Immature InsectsAnnual Review of Entomology, 1981
- The Mineral Nutrition of Wild PlantsAnnual Review of Ecology and Systematics, 1980
- DISPENSING ALLYL ISOTHIOCYANATE AS AN ATTRACTANT FOR TRAPPING CRUCIFER-FEEDING FLEA BEETLESThe Canadian Entomologist, 1980
- Vacuolar location of glucosinolates in horseradish root cellsPlant Science Letters, 1979
- A comparative study of non-host interactions with rust fungiPhysiological Plant Pathology, 1977
- The influence of phosphate and crop species on endogone spores and vesicular-arbuscular mycorrhiza under field conditionsPlant and Soil, 1975
- Egg-laying Habits of Lepidoptera in Relation to Available FoodThe Canadian Entomologist, 1959