Publications by authors named "Cong Van Doan"

Cassava is a valuable export commodity crop that is often attacked by pests, causing economic losses for this crop. The papaya mealybug has become a major pest of cassava in Vietnam. The parasitoid wasp has been demonstrated to be the most efficient parasitoid wasp for controlling in many regions.

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Volatile organic compounds (VOCs), a bouquet of chemical compounds released by all life forms, play essential roles in trophic interactions. VOCs can facilitate a large number of interactions with different organisms belowground. VOCs-regulated plant-plant or plant-insect interaction both below and aboveground has been reported extensively.

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Background: Plant-parasitic nematodes and herbivorous insects have a significant negative impact on global crop production. A successful approach to protect crops from these pests is the in planta expression of nematotoxic or entomotoxic proteins such as crystal proteins from Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) or plant lectins. However, the efficacy of this approach is threatened by emergence of resistance in nematode and insect populations to these proteins.

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How climate change will modify belowground tritrophic interactions is poorly understood, despite their importance for agricultural productivity. Here, we manipulated the three major abiotic factors associated with climate change (atmospheric CO, temperature, and soil moisture) and investigated their individual and joint effects on the interaction between maize, the banded cucumber beetle (Diabrotica balteata), and the entomopathogenic nematode (EPN) Heterorhabditis bacteriophora. Changes in individual abiotic parameters had a strong influence on plant biomass, leaf wilting, sugar concentrations, protein levels, and benzoxazinoid contents.

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Article Synopsis
  • Climate change is affecting plants, insects, and their predators, which could change how they all interact with each other.
  • Scientists studied how higher levels of CO2, hotter temperatures, and less rainfall impact certain predator species like nematodes, spiders, ladybugs, and wasps.
  • They found that while some predators showed reduced survival with climate changes, most of them, especially spider and nematode species, actually did better in hunting their prey.
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Article Synopsis
  • Plants can get ready to defend themselves when they smell signals from other plants being eaten by bugs, which is called priming.
  • In a study with maize plants, researchers found that the roots do not respond the same way to these signals as the leaves do.
  • This means that while leaves can become better at fighting off bugs after smelling the danger, roots don't get that boost and might use different ways to protect themselves underground.
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Article Synopsis
  • The article was published prematurely before final editorial approval.
  • It has been temporarily taken down while the editing process is completed.
  • The publisher apologizes for any inconvenience this may have caused.
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Plants defend themselves against herbivores through the production of toxic and deterrent metabolites. Adapted herbivores can tolerate and sometimes sequester these metabolites, allowing them to feed on defended plants and become toxic to their own enemies. Can herbivore natural enemies overcome sequestered plant defense metabolites to prey on adapted herbivores? To address this question, we studied how entomopathogenic nematodes cope with benzoxazinoid defense metabolites that are produced by grasses and sequestered by a specialist maize herbivore, the western corn rootworm.

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Herbivore natural enemies protect plants by regulating herbivore populations. Whether they can alter the behavior of their prey to increase predation success is unknown. We investigate if and how infection by the entomopathogenic nematode changes the behavior of healthy larvae of the western corn rootworm (), a major pest of maize.

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