2 results match your criteria: "BFW Austrian Research Centre for Forests[Affiliation]"
Sci Rep
October 2020
Department of Zoology and Animal Welfare, University of Agriculture in Krakow, Adama Mickiewicza 24/28, 30-059, Kraków, Poland.
During the Last Glacial Maximum in the Northern Hemisphere, expanding ice sheets forced a large number of plants, including trees, to retreat from their primary distribution areas. Many host-associated herbivores migrated along with their host plants. Long-lasting geographic isolation between glacial refugia could have been led to the allopatric speciation in separated populations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Invertebr Pathol
October 2017
BFW Austrian Research Centre for Forests, Seckendorff-Gudent-Weg 8, 1131 Vienna, Austria. Electronic address:
Larvae of the gypsy moth, Lymantria dispar, infected with the microsporidium, Nosema lymantriae, release infective spores with feces. We tested the effects of simulated light rain on transmission in cages, providing random contamination of host plant foliage with feces. Contamination by larvae in the intermediate stage of infection, 15-16days post inoculation, entailed transmission to a mean 4.
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