Agriculture Reference
In-Depth Information
Graduate Fellowship Program, a Sigma Delta Epsilon Graduate Women in Science
Vessa Notchev grant, a Forbes-Lea Foundation grant, a Miller Grant for Sustainability, a
Botanical Society of America Graduate Research Award, a National Science Foundation
Student (DEB-1011525), and a Sigma Xi Grant-in-Aid of Research. The funding agencies
have not officially endorsed this chapter, and the views expressed herein may not reflect
the views of the EPA or any of the other funding agencies. The topics covered in this review
have benefited from many discussions with M. B. Cruzan, L. Weasel, and T. N. Rosenstiel
at Portland State University and the Bever-Schultz lab at Indiana University. This chap-
ter has also benefited from the valuable feedback provided by Guenther Stotzky, Chris
Wozniak, Tom Platt, M. B. Cruzan and members of the Cruzan lab, and an anonymous
reviewer. Permission to use or expand tables was granted by the International Service for
the Acquisition of Agri-biotech Application (ISAAA) and Icoz and Stotzky. I would like to
thank W. J. Landesman and the Soil Ecology, Microbial Ecology, and Agroecology section
of the Ecological Society of America (ESA) for helping to organize the 2009 ESA sympo-
sium from which this volume was derived.
References
Abel, C. A., and J. J. Adamczyk. 2004. Relative concentration of Cry1A in maize leaves and cotton
bolls with diverse chlorophyll content and corresponding larval development of fall army-
worm (Lepidoptera:Noctuidae) and southwestern corn borer (Lepidoptera:Crambidae) on
maize whorl leaf profiles. Journal of Economic Entomology 97:1737-1744.
Adamczyk, J. J., and D. D. Hardee. 2002. Insect-resistant transgenic crops. Crop Biotechnology
829:23-37.
Ahl Goy, P., G. Warren, J. White, L. Pivalle, P. L. Fearing, and D. Vlachos. 1995. Interaction of insect
tolerant maize with organisms in the ecosystem. Mitteilungen des Biologischen Bundesamts fur
Forst- und Landwirschaft 309:50-53.
Ahmad, A., G. E. Wilde, and K. Y. Zhu. 2006. Evaluation of effects of Coleopteran-specific Cry3Bb1
protein on earthworms exposed to soil containing corn roots or biomass. Environmental
Entomology 35:976-985.
Al-Deeb, M. A., G. E. Wilde, J. M. Blair, and T. C. Todd. 2003. Effect of Bt corn for corn rootworm con-
trol on nontarget soil microarthropods and nematodes. Environmental Entomology 32:859-865.
Alstad, D. N., and D. A. Andow. 1996. Implementing management of insect resistance to transgenic
crops. AgBiotech News and Information 8:177-181.
Anderson, P. L., R. L. Hellmich, J. R. Prasifka, and L. C. Lewis. 2005. Effects on fitness and behavior
of monarch butterfly larvae exposed to a combination of Cry1Ab-expressing corn anthers and
pollen. Environmental Entomology 34:944-952.
Anderson, P. L., R. L. Hellmich, M. K. Sears, D. V. Sumerford, and L. C. Lewis. 2004. Effects of Cry1Ab-
expressing corn anthers on monarch butterfly larvae. Environmental Entomology 33:1109-1115.
Bais, H. P., T. L. Weir, L. G. Perry, S. Gilroy, and J. M. Vivanco. 2006. The role of root exudates in rhizo-
sphere interations with plants and other organisms. Annual Review of Plant Biology 57:233-266.
Bakonyi, G., A. Dolezsai, N. Matrai, and A. Szekacs. 2011. Effects of consumption of Bt -maize (MON
810) on the Collembolan Folsomia candida , over multiple generations: a laboratory study. Insects
2:243-252.
Bakonyi, G., F. Szira, I. Kiss, I. Villanyi, A. Seres, and A. Szekacs. 2006. Preference tests with collem-
bolas on isogenic and Bt -maize. European Journal of Soil Biology 42:S132-S135.
Baumgarte, S., and C. C. Tebbe. 2005. Field studies on the environmental fate of the Cry1Ab Bt -toxin
produced by transgenic maize (MON810) and its effect on bacterial communities in the maize
rhizosphere. Molecular Ecology 14:2539-2551.
Beegle, C. C., and T. Yamamoto. 1992. Invitation paper (CP-Alexander-Fund)—history of Bacillus-
thuringiensis Berliner Research-and-Development. Canadian Entomologist 124:587-616.
 
Search WWH ::




Custom Search