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Christine M. Woodcock

Researcher at Rothamsted Research

Publications -  177
Citations -  10218

Christine M. Woodcock is an academic researcher from Rothamsted Research. The author has contributed to research in topics: Aphid & Sex pheromone. The author has an hindex of 47, co-authored 177 publications receiving 9348 citations. Previous affiliations of Christine M. Woodcock include University of Hertfordshire & The Hertz Corporation.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Insect host location: a volatile situation.

TL;DR: Paired or clustered olfactory receptor neurons might enable fine-scale spatio-temporal resolution of the complex signals encountered when ubiquitous compounds are used.
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The Chemical Ecology of Aphids

TL;DR: Study of aphid chemical ecology involving volatile semiochemicals, particularly pheromones, has been greatly enhanced by the development of electrophysiological rccordings from aphid antennae, using the electroan­ tennograph (EAG) and single-cell recording (SCR) methods.
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Identification of Semiochemicals Released During Aphid Feeding That Attract Parasitoid Aphidius ervi

TL;DR: Volatiles obtained by air entrainment of aphid infested plants were more attractive to A. ervi than those from uninfested plants, in both behavioral bioassays and activity of pure compounds, which significantly increased parasitoid responses to these compounds.
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New roles for cis-jasmone as an insect semiochemical and in plant defense.

TL;DR: Using the olfactory system of the lettuce aphid to investigate volatiles from plants avoided by this insect, (Z)-jasmone was found to be electrophysiologically active and also to be repellent in laboratory choice tests.
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Intercropping increases parasitism of pests

TL;DR: Intercropping with the non-host molasses grass, Melinis minutiflora, significantly decreased levels of infestation by stem-borers in the main crop and also increased larval parasitism of stem- borers by Cotesia sesamiae.