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Incana1992

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呵呵。这个提问太哪个了。不好回答。

110 评论

漂萍过客123

研究昆虫控制的文章Athenix and Monsanto Announce Collaboration on Research for Insect ControlRESEARCH TRIANGLE PARK, . and ST. LOUIS, June 20 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- Athenix Corp. and Monsanto Company today announced they have entered into a three-year research collaboration for insect control on a key class of insects that affects a number of Monsanto's major crops of interest. Financial terms of the agreement were not disclosed. "We are pleased to work with the market leader in crop genetics to bring our technical capabilities to commercialization," said Mike Koziel, chief executive officer for Athenix. "Working with Monsanto to discover novel genes for controlling insect pests increases options for farmers and allows Athenix to demonstrate the power of its integrated discovery platforms for new biotech traits," said Nick Duck, vice president of research at Athenix. Athenix will apply its expertise in microbial screening and genomics to facilitate gene discovery intended to help protect crops such as cotton, soybeans and corn against a common class of insects known as Hemipterans. Hemipteran insects include Lygus, a pest of cotton, and stinkbug, a pest of soybean. "This collaboration will work to offer an essential benefit to our farmer customers by providing insect protection in crops such as corn, cotton and soybeans against the piercing and sucking insects. Insect tolerant crops allow growers to spray less pesticide, making their operations more efficient and at the same time stewarding the environment," said Robert T. Fraley, ., Monsanto executive vice president and chief technology officer. "We're excited to collaborate with Athenix to help broaden grower's options for insect control." About Athenix: Athenix is a leading biotechnology company that develops novel products and technologies for agricultural and industrial applications, including biofuels and bioconversions. Athenix has established an outstanding intellectual property portfolio and market access ability around enhanced plants, microbes, genes, enzymes, and processes with emphasis on two major markets: 1) novel agricultural traits for growers such as insect resistance, nematode resistance, herbicide tolerance, and their use for the crop production industry; and 2) the discovery of genes and proteins for use in the sustainable chemical industry with a focus on biofuels like ethanol and other natural control of locusts New weapons for old enemiesDuring the 1988 desert locust plague, swarms crossed the Atlantic from Mauritania to the Caribbean, flying 5 000 kilometres in 10 were stumped because migrating swarms normally come down to rest every night. But locusts can’t swim, so how could it be? It turned out that the swarms were coming down at sea – on any ships they could find, but also in the water itself. The first ones in all drowned but their corpses made rafts for the other ones to rest on. Since the dawn of agriculture more than 10 000 years ago mankind has had to deal with a resourceful and fearless enemy, Schistocerca gregaria, the desert locust. Normally loners, every so often these natives of the deserts from West Africa to India turn into vast, voracious swarms that leave hunger and poverty behind them wherever they go. Throughout history, farmers and governments have made attempts to repel the bands and swarms of locusts by collecting insects, creating noise, making smoke and burying and burning the insects. But all of this had little effect. With swarms sometimes extending for hundreds of kilometres, and containing billions of individuals, they conquered by sheer force of numbers. Health concernsIt has long puzzled humans where these animals came from and where they survived. Only in the mid-20th century was it realized that the light brown solitary desert-dwelling insect was the same species as the red and yellow locusts of the plagues. Only when its biology was understood and chemical pesticides and aerial spraying became available a few decades ago, could efforts be made to control the insect. But large-scale pesticide use also raised real concerns for human health and the environment. On the seventh-floor Emergency Centre for Locust Operations (ECLO) at FAO Headquarters in Rome, Keith Cressman, FAO's locust forecaster, checks current environmental conditions and locust population data from the three computer screens on his desk. The last big locust upsurge ended early in 2005 and the current alert level is green or calm. The experts at FAO’s ECLO are readying to fight the next round in the age-old battle against locusts – wherever and whenever that may be. “The next time,” says Cressman, “we’ll fight with new tools”. New bio-control agents Recent advances in biological control research, coupled with improved surveillance and intelligence, could make a big difference when the next round in the battle is fought. Such products could make it possible to sharply reduce the amount of chemical pesticides used. One promising avenue is research currently under way at the International Centre for Insect Physiology and Ecology (ICIPE) in Nairobi. An ICIPE team headed by a Zanzibar-born chemical ecologist, Ahmed Hassanali, has identified and synthesized a specific locust pheromone, or chemical signal, that can be used against young locusts with devastating , or PAN for short, normally governs swarming behaviour in adult males who also use it to warn other males to leave them in peace while they mate. But, Hassanali found it has startlingly different results on juvenile wingless locusts, known as hoppers. Hopper bandsJust as adult locusts form swarms, hoppers will, given the right conditions, stop behaving as individuals and line up in marauding bands up to 5 kilometres wide. They are only slightly less voracious than adults, who eat their own weight of food every day. In three separate field trials – the most recent in Sudan last year – Hassanali’s team showed that even minute doses of PAN could stop hopper bands dead in their tracks and make them break caused the insects to resume solitary behaviour. Confused and disoriented, some lost their appetite altogether, while others turned cannibal and ate one other. Any survivors were easy prey for predators. What makes PAN particularly attractive is that the dose needed is only a fraction – typically less than 10 millilitres per hectare – of the quantities of chemical or biological pesticides. This translates into substantially lower costs – 50 cents per hectare as opposed to US$12 for chemical pesticides and $15-20 for other bio-control is clearly a major consideration in the countries in the front line – many of them among the world’s poorest. Green Muscle A different, but also highly effective biological approach is Green Muscle ®, a bio-pesticide developed by the International Institute for Tropical Agriculture’s biological control centre in Cotonou, Benin, and manufactured in South Africa. Green Muscle ® contains spores of the naturally occurring fungus Metarhizium anisopliae var. acridum, which germinate on the skin of locusts and penetrate through their exoskeletons. The fungus then destroys the locust's tissues from the inside. This is definitely not good news for locusts, but the fungus has no effect on other life forms. A product similar to Green Muscle ® is already successfully used in Australia, but the latter's introduction in Africa and Asia is being slowed by several factors. These include a need for further large-scale trials, official approval of the product in several countries, and a relatively short shelf-life in its normal ready-to-spray liquid form. One drawback is that it takes days to kill the locusts. It is also relatively expensive and large-scale production would need to be organized. A solution would be to store the product in powder form and dilute it just before use. Hassanali’s team has also shown that, if used in combination with a small amount of PAN, only a quarter of the normal dose of Green Muscle ® is Growth RegulatorsAlso being readied for the modern locust fighter’s armoury is a class of products known as Insect Growth Regulators, or IGRs, which influence the ability of hoppers to moult and grow properly. They have no direct toxic effects on vertebrates. IGRs are effective for several weeks after application and can be used in so-called barrier treatments. In this method only narrow swathes of the product are applied, perpendicular to the direction of the marching hopper bands. Only 10 percent of the amount used in blanket treatment is needed. After marching over one or two barriers the hoppers absorb enough product to die while moulting. As with PAN and Green Muscle ®, however, IGRs need to be aimed at locusts at an early stage in their lives, before they take to the air. That, in turn, requires an advanced level of surveillance and intelligence-gathering to make sure that any locust concentrations are nipped in the bud. eLocust2Although back at ECLO Keith Cressman has satellites, computers and mathematical models at his disposal, the weak link in the chain has been the time it takes to get good information from the mobile ground teams whose job it is to keep tabs on locust populations have to work in some of the world’s remotest, hottest and sometimes (for environmental and security reasons) most hostile places. A week or more might go by before a report from, say, the central Sahara, reached Cressman’s desk. By that time the locusts – “They don’t need visas,” he says – would quite likely have moved to another country or continent altogether. This will soon change however. Field teams are now being issued with special hand-held devices to record vital locust and environmental data and relay them back to their own headquarters and on to Rome in real time. Developed by the French Space Agency CNES, the eLocust2 device is able to bounce the information off communications satellites and have the data arrive in the National Locust Control Centre in the affected country a few minutes later, from where they are passed on to Cressman for analysis. In case of unusually heavy hopper concentrations, immediate action can be taken to make sure that the locusts never grow old enough to swarm. Back to the fieldWriting in Science magazine, locust expert Martin Enserink gave the following graphic description of a locust population gone out of control:“On a beautiful November morning (in Morocco) it’s clear, even from afar, that something’s terribly wrong with the trees around this tiny village. They are covered with a pinkish-red gloss, as if their leaves were changing colour... "As you get closer, the hue becomes a wriggling mass; a giant cap of insects on every tree, devouring the tiny leaves. Get closer still and you’ll hear a soft drizzle: the steady stream of locust droppings falling to the ground.” Such nightmare visions, and locust plagues with them, may one day be a thing of the past.

337 评论

陈好好很好

[1]. 徐卫滨, 无选择策略的改进蜜蜂群算法. 太原科技大学学报, 2011(05): 第343-347页.[2]. 陈璇与胡福良, 调控蜜蜂采粉行为的遗传因素. 中国蜂业, 2010(11): 第13-15页.[3]. 汪明明等, 蜜蜂工蜂卵巢发育的影响因素. 中国蜂业, 2010(10): 第5-7页.[4]. 曾鸣等, 基于混沌量子蜜蜂算法的机会约束输电规划. 电力系统保护与控制, 2010(22): 第1-7+14页.[5]. 安建东与陈文锋, 全球农作物蜜蜂授粉概况. 中国农学通报, 2011(01): 第374-382页.[6]. 陈璇与胡福良, 雌性蜜蜂级型决定的分子机制. 蜜蜂杂志, 2011(04): 第1-7页.[7]. 侯春生与张学锋, 生态条件的多样性变化对蜜蜂生存的影响. 生态学报, 2011(17): 第5061-5070页.[8]. 陶德双等, 中华蜜蜂为石榴授粉效果研究. 蜜蜂杂志, 2010(03): 第10-11页.[9]. 李兆英与奚耕思, 中华蜜蜂工蜂复眼的胚后发育研究. 陕西师范大学学报(自然科学版), 2010(03): 第60-64页.[10]. 严盈, 彭露与万方浩, 昆虫卵黄原蛋白功能多效性:以蜜蜂为例. 昆虫学报, 2010(03): 第335-348页.[11]. 周亮等, 蜜蜂囊状幼虫病RT-PCR快速检测方法的初步应用. 蜜蜂杂志, 2010(06): 第9-10页.[12]. 李兆英, 中华蜜蜂工蜂视叶胚后发育过程中的细胞凋亡. 昆虫知识, 2010(04): 第680-684页.[13]. 沈登荣等, 蜜蜂作为病原物载体的研究进展. 中国生物防治, 2010(S1): 第118-122页.[14]. 周亮等, 蜜蜂囊状幼虫病RNA依赖的RNA聚合酶部分基因的克隆和序列分析. 中国畜牧兽医, 2010(11): 第50-52页.[15]. 郑肇葆, 产生最佳Tuned模板的蜜蜂交配算法. 武汉大学学报(信息科学版), 2009(04): 第387-390+435页.[16]. 李伟强, 徐建城与殷剑锋, 蜜蜂群优化算法用于训练前馈神经网络. 计算机工程与应用, 2009(24): 第43-45+49页.[17]. 周丹银等, 蜜蜂为油菜授粉效果初步研究. 蜜蜂杂志, 2010(01): 第3-5页.[18]. 薛晗等, 空间机器人随机故障容错规划的蜜蜂算法. 信息与控制, 2009(06): 第724-734页.[19]. 张成翠与曾建潮, 蜜蜂群组决策方法的建模与仿真. 太原科技大学学报, 2009(06): 第452-455页.[20]. 周婷等, 蜜蜂巢房大小影响狄斯瓦螨的繁殖行为. 昆虫知识, 2006(01): 第89-93页.[21]. 历延芳, 闫德斌与葛凤晨, 蜜蜂为塑料大棚西瓜和田间西瓜授粉试验报告. 蜜蜂杂志, 2006(01): 第6-7页.[22]. 王成菊等, 阿维菌素及其混配制剂对蜜蜂的安全性评价. 农业环境科学学报, 2006(01): 第229-231页.[23]. 黄智勇, 蜜蜂全基因组出笼前后. 昆虫知识, 2007(01): 第5-9页.[24]. 姜双林与李博平, 陇东地区不同生境下蜜蜂的种类及其生态分布. 草业科学, 2007(05): 第89-91页.[25]. 王志江与魏红福, 蜜蜂α-葡萄糖苷酶的分离纯化及其酶学性质研究. 食品科学, 2007(07): 第304-308页.[26]. 罗阿蓉等, 后基因组时代的蜜蜂QTL研究. 昆虫学报, 2007(09): 第950-956页.[27]. 何铠光, 刘佩珊与苏鸿基, 台湾蜜蜂的螺旋菌质病研究. 蜜蜂杂志, 2007(S1): 第3-7页.[28]. 许益鹏等, 蜜蜂囊状幼虫病毒病的Nest-PCR检测. 科技通报, 2007(06): 第824-827页.[29]. 林小丽等, 农药对蜜蜂的风险评价技术进展. 农药学学报, 2008(04): 第404-409页.[30]. 刘之光与石巍, 中国甘肃东北部地区东方蜜蜂(Apis cerana)形态学研究. 环境昆虫学报, 2008(02): 第97-102页.

89 评论

亲爱的玉玉

catchinginsects(现在进行时)catchinsects(一般形态)

140 评论

zhangzhangdd

先不说内容,首先格式要正确,一篇完整的毕业论文,题目,摘要(中英文),目录,正文(引言,正文,结语),致谢,参考文献。学校规定的格式,字体,段落,页眉页脚,开始写之前,都得清楚的,你的论文算是写好了五分之一。然后,选题,你的题目时间宽裕,那就好好考虑,选一个你思考最成熟的,可以比较多的阅读相关的参考文献,从里面获得思路,确定一个模板性质的东西,照着来,写出自己的东西。如果时间紧急,那就随便找一个参考文献,然后用和这个参考文献相关的文献,拼出一篇,再改改。正文,语言必须是学术的语言。一定先列好提纲,这就是框定每一部分些什么,保证内容不乱,将内容放进去,写好了就。参考文献去中国知网搜索,校园网免费下载。

151 评论

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