All Fields
Computer Science
Medicine
FAQ
Contact
Sign in
Cotesia rubecula
Â
National Institutes of Health
Topic mentions per year
Topic mentions per year
2001-2017
0
1
2
2001
2017
Papers overview
Semantic Scholar uses AI to extract papers important to this topic.
2017
2017
Balancing selection maintains sex determining alleles in multiple-locus complementary sex determination.
Jerome J. Weis
,
Paul J. Ode
,
George Eugene Heimpel
Evolution; international journal of organic…
2017
Hymenopteran species in which sex is determined through a haplo-diploid mechanism known as complementary sex determination (CSD…Â
(More)
Is this relevant?
2014
2014
Cover crop mulches influence biological control of the imported cabbageworm (Pieris rapae L., Lepidoptera: Pieridae) in cabbage
Alexandria N. Bryant
,
Thomas C. Coudron
,
Daniel C. Brainard
,
Zsofia Szendrei
2014
a r t i c l e i n f oÂ
Is this relevant?
2011
2011
Inhibition of Melanization by a Parasitoid Serine Protease Homolog Venom Protein Requires Both the Clip and the Non-Catalytic Protease-Like Domains
Pune Thomas
,
Sassan Asgari
Insects
2011
Endoparasitoid wasps inject a variety of components into their host hemocoel at oviposition to facilitate successful development…Â
(More)
Is this relevant?
2009
2009
Introduction and evaluation of Cotesia rubecula, a parasitoid of Pieris rapae in New Zealand
Peter J. Cameron
,
Glenn Walker
2009
The host specificity of Cotesia rubecula (Marshall) was examined through literature searches, behavioural and ecological…Â
(More)
Is this relevant?
2001
2001
The effect of resource aggregation at different scales: optimal foraging behavior of Cotesia rubecula.
Brigitte Tenhumberg
,
Matthias Keller
,
Andrew J. Tyre
,
H. P. Possingham
The American naturalist
2001
Resources can be aggregated both within and between patches. In this article, we examine how aggregation at these different…Â
(More)
Is this relevant?
2001
2001
Promoter studies of a polydnavirus gene from Cotesia rubecula (Hym: Braconidae)
Sassan Asgari
,
O. Schmidt
Archives of Virology
2001
 The Cotesia rubecula polydnavirus gene, CrV1, is expressed in a highly transient fashion. Within four hours after egg deposition…Â
(More)
Is this relevant?