Journal of Chemical Ecology (2014) 40 (6)
Articles of Journal of Chemical Ecology entered for 2014 and volume (issue): 40 (6)
Journal of Chemical Ecology (2014) 40, 522-533
Feng Liu, Kenneth F. Haynes, Arthur G. Appel and Nannan Liu (2014)
Antennal olfactory sensilla responses to insect chemical repellents in the common bed bug, Cimex lectularius
Journal of Chemical Ecology (2014) 40, 560-568
Anne C. Jones, Donald E. Mullins, Tappey H. Jones and Scott M. Salom (2014)
Characterization of physical and chemical defenses in the hemlock woolly adelgid
Journal of Chemical Ecology (2014) 40, 577-589
Boyd A. Mori and Maya L. Evenden (2014)
Efficacy and mechanisms of communication disruption of the red clover casebearer moth (Coleophora deauratella) with complete and partial pheromone formulations
Journal of Chemical Ecology (2014) 40, 590-598
Qi Yan, Le Van Vang, Chau Nguyen Quoc Khanh, Hideshi Naka and Tetsu Ando (2014)
Reexamination of the female sex pheromone of the sweet potato vine borer moth: Identification and field evaluation of a tricosatriene
Journal of Chemical Ecology (2014) 40, 599-608
Paula Altesor, Álvaro García, Elizabeth Font, Alejandra Rodríguez-Haralambides, Francisco Vilaró, Martín Oesterheld, Roxina Soler and Andrés González (2014)
Glycoalkaloids of wild and cultivated Solanum: Effects on specialist and generalist insect herbivores
Journal of Chemical Ecology (2014) 40, 617-620
Theresa Thiele, Christian Kost, Flavio Roces and Rainer Wirth (2014)
Foraging leaf-cutting ants learn to reject Vitis vinifera ssp. vinifera plants that emit herbivore-induced volatiles
Journal of Chemical Ecology (2014) 40, 621-631
Dani Lucas-Barbosa, Erik H. Poelman, Yavanna Aartsma, Tjeerd A.L. Snoeren, Joop J.A. van Loon and Marcel Dicke (2014)
Caught between parasitoids and predators - survival of a specialist herbivore on leaves and flowers of mustard plants
Journal of Chemical Ecology (2014) 40, 632-642
Karin Rand, Einat Bar, Matan Ben-Ari, Efraim Lewinsohn and Moshe Inbar (2014)
The mono - and sesquiterpene content of aphid-induced galls on Pistacia palaestina is not a simple reflection of their composition in intact leaves