1996
DOI: 10.1303/aez.31.255
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Discovery of Male Acoustic Signals in the Greenhouse Whitefly, Trialeurodes vaporariorum (WESTWOOD) (Homoptera: Aleyrodidae)

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Cited by 22 publications
(21 citation statements)
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“…Our present knowledge comes primarily from studies on the greenhouse whitefly, T. vaporariorum (Las 1979;Ahman and Ekbom 1981;Li and Maschwitz 1985;Kanmiya 1996Kanmiya , 2006 and research conducted on B. tabaci, biotype A, , biotype B (= Bemisia argentifolii) , a biotype native to China referred as ZHJ1 and interactions between biotypes B and ZHJ1 ). However, it is clear that whiteflies participate in a series of complex and elaborate behaviors in selecting, courting, and copulating with the opposite sex of their own species or biotype.…”
Section: Courtship and Matingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Our present knowledge comes primarily from studies on the greenhouse whitefly, T. vaporariorum (Las 1979;Ahman and Ekbom 1981;Li and Maschwitz 1985;Kanmiya 1996Kanmiya , 2006 and research conducted on B. tabaci, biotype A, , biotype B (= Bemisia argentifolii) , a biotype native to China referred as ZHJ1 and interactions between biotypes B and ZHJ1 ). However, it is clear that whiteflies participate in a series of complex and elaborate behaviors in selecting, courting, and copulating with the opposite sex of their own species or biotype.…”
Section: Courtship and Matingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Prolonged courtship behavior accompanied by songs continuously produced by abdominal vibration suggest that the signal has a sexually stimulating function at the beginning of the behavioral sequence (Kanmiya 1996). The courtship songs, therefore, would play an effective role in maintaining reproductive isolation wherever lacewings of both types inhabit the same region.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Occasionally, biotype B females also undulated their abdomens, but this was not reported for biotype A. Kanmiya (1996) reported that the male abdominal movements produced vibrations that were transmitted to the females through the leaf substrate suggesting that these acoustic signals are part of the specific mate recognition system of whiteflies. Li et al (1989) reported that about 15% of courting biotype A males increased the frequency of their antennal drumming, while pushing the females with the sides of their bodies in preparation for copulation.…”
Section: Male Abdominal Undulationmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…However, it is clear that whiteflies participate in a series of complex and elaborate behaviors in selecting, courting, and copulating with the opposite sex of their own species or biotype. Our present knowledge comes primarily from studies on the greenhouse whitefly, T. vaporariorum (Las 1979;Ahman and Ekbom 1981;Li and Maschwitz 1985;Kanmiya 1996Kanmiya , 2006 and research conducted on B. tabaci, biotype A, (Li et al 1989), biotype B (= Bemisia argentifolii) (Perring and Symmes 2006), a biotype native to China referred as ZHJ1 and interactions between biotypes B and ZHJ1 ). Perring and Symmes (2006) observed that duration of antennal drumming, synchronous abdominal undulations, and body angle between males and females during copulation of biotype B were similar to biotype A and to T. vaporariorum.…”
Section: Courtship and Matingmentioning
confidence: 99%
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