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Jocelyn G. Millar

Researcher at University of California, Riverside

Publications -  454
Citations -  13748

Jocelyn G. Millar is an academic researcher from University of California, Riverside. The author has contributed to research in topics: Sex pheromone & Pheromone. The author has an hindex of 57, co-authored 435 publications receiving 12421 citations. Previous affiliations of Jocelyn G. Millar include National Research Council & University of California, Berkeley.

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Evaluation of 13-Tetradecenyl Acetate Pheromone for Melanotus communis (Coleoptera: Elateridae) Detection in North Carolina Row Crop Agroecosystems.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors conducted a two-year study using a recently identified sex attractant pheromone, 13-tetradecenyl acetate, to study the larval behavior and ecology of the adults of Melanotus communis Gyllenhal.
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Effects of Pheromone Dose and Conspecific Density on the Use of Aggregation-Sex Pheromones by the Longhorn Beetle Phymatodes grandis and Sympatric Species (Coleoptera: Cerambycidae).

TL;DR: These characteristics of pheromone use could suggest that cerambycids utilize an optimal density strategy to limit competition for scarce and ephemeral hosts, i.e., the stressed or dying trees that typically constitute their larval hosts.
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Identification of the Major Sex Pheromone Component of the Scale Insect, Aulacaspis murrayae Takahashi

TL;DR: In bioassays, males were strongly attracted to a synthesized sample of (R)-solanone, demonstrating that this compound is a sex pheromone component for this species.
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Editors’ Preface (papers by J.R. Miller, L.J. Gut, F.M. de Lame, and L.L. Stelinski)

TL;DR: Mating disruption has been shown to work remarkably well, and has been developed and commercially implemented on a large scale, and for the majority of insect species for which mating disruption have been attempted, robust and effective control of the target species by pheromone-based mating disruption has remained elusive.

Conserved Class of Queen Pheromones Stops Social Insect Worker Reproduction

TL;DR: The sexual division of labour and the evolution of queen pheromones, Oral Presentation 20.20 shows the importance of the role of EMT in the sexual evolution of women.