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Kevin D. Floate

Researcher at Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada

Publications -  118
Citations -  3808

Kevin D. Floate is an academic researcher from Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada. The author has contributed to research in topics: Wolbachia & Pteromalidae. The author has an hindex of 31, co-authored 109 publications receiving 3428 citations. Previous affiliations of Kevin D. Floate include Northern Arizona University & University of Lethbridge.

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A Review on the Toxicity and Non-Target Effects of Macrocyclic Lactones in Terrestrial and Aquatic Environments

TL;DR: The results of this review clearly demonstrate that regarding environmental impacts many macrocyclic lactones are substances of high concern particularly with larval instars of invertebrates.
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Plant hybrid zones affect biodiversity: tools for a genetic‐based understanding of community structure

TL;DR: These studies suggest that genetic-based plant traits affect the distribution of many species and that the variation in hybrids can be used as tools to examine the genetic components of community structure and biodiversity.
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Fecal residues of veterinary parasiticides: Nontarget effects in the pasture environment

TL;DR: The nature and extent of the effects of veterinary parasiticides in dung of treated livestock, and how greater awareness of these nontarget effects has resulted in regulatory changes in the registration of veterinary products are described are described.
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Plant genetic determinants of arthropod community structure and diversity

TL;DR: The overall patterns of community differences remained remarkably stable, suggesting that the genetic differences among cross types exert a strong organizing influence on the arthropod community, and support the extended phenotype concept.
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The "hybrid bridge' hypothesis: host shifting via plant hybrid swarms

TL;DR: The hybrid bridge hypothesis argues that the presence of plant hybrid intermediates facilitates host shifting by herbivores such that host shifting is more likely to occur in their presence than in their absence.