National Academies Press: OpenBook
« Previous: APPENDIX C: ADDITIONAL COMMENTS ON THE USDA ECONOMIC EVALUATION
Suggested Citation:"REFERENCES." National Research Council. 1981. Cotton Boll Weevil: An Evaluation of USDA Programs : a Report. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/18570.
×
Page 120
Suggested Citation:"REFERENCES." National Research Council. 1981. Cotton Boll Weevil: An Evaluation of USDA Programs : a Report. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/18570.
×
Page 121
Suggested Citation:"REFERENCES." National Research Council. 1981. Cotton Boll Weevil: An Evaluation of USDA Programs : a Report. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/18570.
×
Page 122
Suggested Citation:"REFERENCES." National Research Council. 1981. Cotton Boll Weevil: An Evaluation of USDA Programs : a Report. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/18570.
×
Page 123
Suggested Citation:"REFERENCES." National Research Council. 1981. Cotton Boll Weevil: An Evaluation of USDA Programs : a Report. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/18570.
×
Page 124
Suggested Citation:"REFERENCES." National Research Council. 1981. Cotton Boll Weevil: An Evaluation of USDA Programs : a Report. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/18570.
×
Page 125
Suggested Citation:"REFERENCES." National Research Council. 1981. Cotton Boll Weevil: An Evaluation of USDA Programs : a Report. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/18570.
×
Page 126
Suggested Citation:"REFERENCES." National Research Council. 1981. Cotton Boll Weevil: An Evaluation of USDA Programs : a Report. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/18570.
×
Page 127
Suggested Citation:"REFERENCES." National Research Council. 1981. Cotton Boll Weevil: An Evaluation of USDA Programs : a Report. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/18570.
×
Page 128
Suggested Citation:"REFERENCES." National Research Council. 1981. Cotton Boll Weevil: An Evaluation of USDA Programs : a Report. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/18570.
×
Page 129
Suggested Citation:"REFERENCES." National Research Council. 1981. Cotton Boll Weevil: An Evaluation of USDA Programs : a Report. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/18570.
×
Page 130
Suggested Citation:"REFERENCES." National Research Council. 1981. Cotton Boll Weevil: An Evaluation of USDA Programs : a Report. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/18570.
×
Page 131

Below is the uncorrected machine-read text of this chapter, intended to provide our own search engines and external engines with highly rich, chapter-representative searchable text of each book. Because it is UNCORRECTED material, please consider the following text as a useful but insufficient proxy for the authoritative book pages.

REFERENCES Adkisson, P. L. (l97l) Objective use of insecticides in agriculture. Pages 43-5l, Agricultural Chemicals - Harmony or Discord for Food, People, Environment. Proc. Symp. Univ. Calif. Div. Agric. Sci. Sacramento, California, edited by J. E. Swift. University of California. Adkisson, P. L. (l973) The principles, strategies and tactics of pest control in cotton. Pages 274-282, Studies in Population Management, edited by P. W. Geier. Mem. Ecol. Soc. Austr., Vol. I. All, J. N., M. Ali, E. Hornjak, and J. B. Weaver (l977) Joint action of two pyrethroids with methyl parathion, methomyl, and chlorpyrifos on Heliothis zea and Heliothis virescens in the laboratory and cotton and sweetcorn. J. Econ. Entomol. • 70:8l2-8l7. Altieri, M. A., and W. N. Whitcomb (l979) The potential use of weeds in the manipulation of beneficial insects. HortScience l4:l2-l8. Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (l98la) Environmental Evaluation of Alternative Beltwide Boll Weevil/Cotton Insect Management Programs. Overall Evaluation, Appendix C. APHIS 8l-33, April. Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (l98lb) Boll Weevil Eradication Trial, Final Report. Overall Evaluation, Appendix F. APHIS Staff Report, April. Bailey, J. C., B. W. Hanny, and W. R. Meredith (l978) Comparisons of insect populations on cotton varieties at Stoneville, Mississippi in l977. Beltwide Cotton Prod. Res. Conf., National Cotton Council, Memphis, p. 83. (Abstr.) Bergman, D., T. J. Henneberry, and L. A. Bariola (l98l) Boll weevil in Arizona stub cotton. Beltwide Cotton Prod. Res. Conf., National Cotton Council, Memphis. (in press) (Abstr.) Boll Weevil Research Laboratory (l98la) Concerning: South Mississippi, l980. Attractivenss of females to sterilized and unsterilized males and grandlure. USDA-SEA, Mississippi State, Mississsippi. Unpublished report. l20

l2l Boll Weevil Research Laboratory (l98lb) Concerning: Summary of l980 results in field competitiveness studies. USDA-SEA, Mississippi State, Mississippi. Unpublished report. Boll Weevil Research Laboratory (l98lc) Concerning: North Carolina aerial release of boll weevils to determine efficacy of pheripheral versus infield drops. USDA-SEA, Mississippi State, Mississippi. Unpublished report. Brazzel, J. R. (l96l) Boll weevil resistance to insecticides in Texas in l960. Tex. Agric. Exp. Stn. Prog. Rept. 2l7l. Brazzel, J. R., H. Chambers, and P. J. Hanunen (l96l) A laboratory rearing method and dosage - mortality data on the bollworm Heliothis zea. J. Econ. Entomol. 54:949. Brazzel, J. R. (l963) Resistance to DDT in Heliothis virescens. J. Econ. Entomol. 56:57l-574. Brazzel, J. R. (l964) DDT resistance in Heliothis zea. J. Econ. Entomol. 57:455-457. Brazzel, J. R. (l976) A Plan for Boll Weevil Elimination in the Cotton Belt. Pages l54-l58, Boll Weevil Suppression, Management and Elimination Technology. Proceedings of a Conference, Feb. l3-l5, l974. Memphis, TN, ARS-S-7l. April l976. Washington, DC: U.S. Department of Agriculture. Bridge, R. R., W. R. Meredith, Jr., and J. F. Chism (l97l) Comparative performance of obsolete varieties and current varieties of upland cotton. Crop Sci. ll:29-32. Brown, W. L. Jr., T. Eisner, and R. H. Whitlake (l970) Allemones and kairomones. Transpecific chemical messengers. Bioscience 20:2l-22. Bruer, H. L. (l976) Regulatory Aspects of Boll Weevil Eradication in the Cotton Belt. Pages l59-l60, Boll Weevil Suppression, Management, and Elimination Technology, USDA ARS-S-7l. Bull, D. L., and G. W. Ivie (l978) Fate of diflubenzuron in cotton, soil, and rotating crops. J. Agric. Food Chem. 26:5l5-520. Butenandt, A., R. Beckmann, D. Stamm, and E. Hecker (l959) Uber den sexual Lockstaff der Seidenspinnen Borobyx mori, Reindarstellung und Konstitution. Z. Naturforsch. Bl4:283-284. Call, T. B., and J. B. Weaver (l980) Resistance to Heliothis in an interspecific cotton hybrid. Beltwide Cotton Prod. Res. Conf., National Cotton Council, Memphis. Carpenter, K. E., and D. H. Miller (l980) Final Report on the Environmental Evaluation of the l979 Boll Weevil Control Trial Programs. KFR 273-80, 25 July l980. Ketron, Inc., Arlington, VA. (This appears as attachment C in APHIS l98la.) Carpenter, K. E., and D. H. Miller (l98la) Final Report on the Environmental Evaluation of the l980 Boll Weevil Control Trial Programs. KFR 303-8l, 23 January l98l. Ketron, Inc., Arlington, VA. (This appears as attachment D in APHIS l98la.) Carpenter, K. E., and D. H. Miller (l98lb) Three Year Summary of the Boll Weevil Control Trial Programs. KFR 3l2-8l, l3 February l98l. Ketron, Inc., Arlington, VA. (This appears as Attachment I in APHIS l98la.)

l22 Clower, D. F. (l980) Changes in Heliothis spp. attacking cotton in recent years and how they have affected control. Beltwide Cotton Prod. Res. Conf., National Cotton Council, Memphis. Coad, B. R., and G. L. McNeil (l924) Dusting cotton from airplanes. USDA Bull. l204. Collins, K., R. B. Evans, and R. D. Barry (l979) World Cotton Production and Use Projections for l985 and l990. U.S.D.A. Economics, Statistics, and Cooperatives Service; Foreign Agriculture Service. Foreign Agric. Econ. Report No. l54. Washington, DC: U.S. Department of Agriculture. Copplestone, J. F. (l977) A global view of pesticide safety. Pages l47-l55, Pesticide Management and Insecticide Resistance, edited by D. L. Watson and A. W. A. Brown. New York: Academic Press. Council on Environmental Quality (CEQ) (l978) Biological Agents for Pest Control: Status and Prospects. Library of Congress No. 77600057. Washington, DC: Office of Environmental Quality. Cross, W. H. (l973) Biology, control and eradication of the boll weevil. Ann. Rev. Entomol. l8:l7-46. Cross, W. H. (l98l) Ecology of cotton insects. lr\ Cotton Insect Management with Special Reference to the Boll Weevil, USDA Agricultural Handbook Series. (in press) Crowder, L. A., M. S. Tollefson, and T. F. Watson (l979) Dosage mortality studies of synthetic pyrethroids and methyl parathion in the tobacco budworm. J. Econ. Entomol. 72:l-3. Davich, T. B., and D. A. Lindquist (l962) Exploratory studies on gamma radiation for the sterilization of the boll weevil. J. Econ. Entomol. 55:l64-l67. Davich, T. B., J. C. Keller, E. B. Mitchell, P. Huddleston, R. Hill, D. A. Lindquist, G. McKibben, and W. H. Cross (l965) Preliminary field experiments with sterile males for evaluation of the boll weevils. J. Econ. Entomol. 58:l27-l3l. Davich, T. B. (l976) Boll weevil sterility. Pages 53-58, Boll Weevil Suppression, Management, and Elimination Technology. USDA ARS-S-7l. Davich, T. B., D. D. Hardee, and J. Acala M. (l970) Long range dispersal of boll weevils determined with wing traps baited with males. J. Econ. Entomol. 63:l706-l708. Davis, D. D. (l979) Synthesis of commercial F^ hybrids in cotton. II. Long strong-fibered G^ hirsutum L. X G^ barbadense L. hybrids with superior geonomic properties. Crop Sci. l9:ll5-ll6. Davis, D. D., J. J. Ellington, and J. C. Brown (l973) Mortality factors affecting cotton insects: I. Resistance of smooth and nectariless characters in Acala cottons to Heliothis zea, Pectinophora gossypiella, and Trichoplusia ni. J. Environ. Qual. 2:530-535. Davis, J. W., J. A. Harding, and D. A. Wolfenbarger (l975) Activity of a synthetic pyrethroid against cotton insects. J. Econ. Entomol. 68:373-374. DeBord, D. V. (l977) Cotton insect and weed loss analysis. The Cotton Foundation.

l23 Dilday, R. H., and T. N. Shaver (l980) Variability in flower-bud gossypol content and agronomic and fiber properties within the primitive race collection of cotton. Crop Sci. 20:9l-95. Ebeling, W. (l980) The Fruited Plain. The Story of American Agriculture. Berkeley: Univ. Calif. Press. Economics and Statistics Service (l98la) Overall Evaluation of Beltwide Boll Weevil/Cotton Insect Management Programs. ESS Staff Report, May. Economics and Statistics Service (l98lb) Economic Evaluation of Alternative Beltwide Boll Weevil/Cotton Insect Management Programs. Overall Evaluation, Appendix B. ESS Staff Report, April. Economics and Statistics Service (l98lc) Program Definitions and Public Costs, Beltwide Boll Weevil/Cotton Insect Management Programs. Overall Evaluation, Appendix D. ESS Staff Report, Apr il. Economics and Statistics Service (l98ld) The Delphi: Insecticide and Lint Yields, Beltwide Boll Weevil/Cotton Insect Management Programs. Overall Evaluation, Appendix E. ESS Staff Report, April. Elkinton, J. S., and R. T. Carde (l980) Distribution, dispersal and apparent survival of male gypsy moths as determined by capture in pheromone-baited traps. Environ. Entomol. 9:729-737. El-Sebae, A. H. (l977) Incidents of local pesticide hazards and their toxicological interpretation. Pages l37-l52, Proceedings UC/AID University of Alexandria Seminar Pesticide Management. Alexandria, Egypt. EPA (l979) Diflubenzuron Decision Document. Special Pesticide Review Decision, March 26, l979. Fisher, W. D., and M. D. Cannon (l98l) A production system for short-season cotton production in Arizona. Beltwide Cotton Prod. Res. Conf., National Cotton Council, Memphis. (in press) (Abstr.) Foster, R. N., R. T. Staten, and E. Miller (l977) Evaluation of traps for pink bollworm. J. Econ. Entomol. 70:289-29l. Gaston, L. K., H. H. Shorey, and S. A. Saario (l967) Insect population control by the use of sex pheromones to inhibit orientation between the sexes. Nature 2l3:ll55. Georghiou, G. P., and C. E. Taylor (l977) Pesticide resistance as an evolutionary phenomena. Pages 759-785, Proc. l5th International Congress Entomol. Washington, D.C. Gipson, J. R., and H. E. Joham (l968a) influence of night temperature on growth and development of cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.). I. Fruiting and boll development. Agron. J. 60:292-295. Gipson, J. R., and H. E. Joham (l968b) Influence of night temperature on growth and development of cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.). II. Fiber properties. Agron. J. 60:296-298. Gonzalez, D., D. A. Ramsey, T. F. Leigh, B. C. Ekbom, and R. van den Bosch (l977) A comparison of vacuum and whole-plant methods for sampling predaceous arthropods on cotton. Environ. Entomol. 6:750-760.

l24 Griffin, J. G., P. P. Sikorowski, and O. H. Lindig (l98l) Mass rearing: boll weevils. Cotton Insect Management with Special Reference to the Boll Weevil, edited by R. L. Ridgway, E. A. Lloyd, and W. H. Cross. (in press) Guice Jr., O. T. (l976) Regulatory Activities Carried on Under the Pilot Boll Weevil Eradication Experiment, l97l-73. Pages 73-73, Boll Weevil Suppression, Management, and Elimination Technology. USDA ARS-S-7l. Hagan, H. R. (l9l9) The Formation of the Western Plant Quarantine Board. California Oept. of Agriculture. Mo. Bui. 8 (8):493. Hajjar, N. P., and J. E. Casida (l978) Insecticidal benzoylphenyl ureas: structure activity relationships as chitin synthesis inhibitors. Science 200:l499-l500. Hartstack, A. W., J. A. Witz, and R. C. Ridgway (l975) Suggested applications of a dynamic Heliothis model (MOTHZV-l) in pest management decision making. Pages ll8-l22, Proceedings of l975 Beltwide Cotton Production Research Conference. Haynes, D. L., and S. H. Gage (l98l) The Cereal Leaf Beetle in North America. Ann. Rev. Entomol. 26:259-287. Heilman, M. D., M. J. Lukefahr, L. N. Namken, and J. W. Norman (l977) Field evaluation of a short season production system in lower Rio Grande Valley of Texas. Beltwide Cotton Prod. Res. Conf., National Cotton Council, Memphis, pp. 80-83. Herbicide Handbook of the Weed Science Society of America. (l974) 3rd. ed. Champaign, Illinois: WSSA. 430 pp. Jenkins, J. N., and W. L. Parrott (l97l) Effectiveness of frego bract as a boll weevil resistance character in cotton. Crop Sci. ll:739-743. Jones, J. E. (l972) Effect of morphological characters of cotton on insects and pathogens. Beltwide Cotton Prod. Res. Conf., National Cotton Council, Memphis, pp. 88-92. Jones, J. E., D. F. Clower, M. R. Milann, W. D. Caldwell, and 0. R. Melville (l976) Resistance in upland cotton to the banded-wing whitefly. Beltwide Cotton Prod. Res. Conf., National Cotton Council, Memphis, pp. 88-98. Jones, J. E., D. F. Clower, B. R. Williams, J. W. Brand, K. L. Quebedeaux, and M. R. Milam (l977) Isogenic evaluation of different sources of glabrousness for agronomic performance and pest resistance. Beltwide Cotton Prod. Res. Conf., National Cotton Council, Memphis, pp. ll0-lll. Jones, J. E., B. R. Williams, J. W. Brand, D. F. Clower, and D. T. Bowman (l978a) Interacting effects of the okra leaf, frego bract, and glabrous traits on pest resistance and agronomic characters. Beltwide Cotton Prod. Res. Conf., National Cotton Council, Memphis, pp. 84-85. (Abstr.) Jones, J. E., J. B. Weaver, Jr., and M. F. Schuster (l978b) Host plant resistance to the boll weevil. Pages 50-73, The Boll Weevil: Management Strategies, Southern Cooperative Series Bulletin 228. Karlson, P., and A. Butenandt (l959) Pheromones (ectohormones) in insects. Ann. Rev. Entomol. 4:39-58.

l25 Knipling, E. F. (l960) Use of insects for their own destruction. J. Econ. Entomol. 53:4l5-420. Knipling, E. F. (l979) Basic principles of insect population suppression. U.S. Dept. Agr. Handbook No. 5l2. Washington, DC. Lanier, G. N., A. Classon, T. Stewart, J. J. Piston, and R. M. Silverstein (l980) Ips pini: Basis for interpopulational differences in pheromone biology. J. Chera. Ecol. 6:677-687. Lee, J. A. (l97l) Some problems in breeding smooth leaved cottons. Crop Sci. ll:448-450. Leggett, J. E., E. P. Lloyd, and J. A. Witz (l98l) Efficiency of infield traps in detecting and suppressing low population levels of boll weevils. Environ. Entomol. l0:l25-l30. Lloyd, E. P., J. R. McCoy, and J. W. Haynes (l976) Release of Sterile Male Boll Weevils in the Pilot Boll Weevil Eradication Experiment in l972-73. Pages 95-l02, Boll Weevil Suppression, Management, and Elimination Technology. USDA ARS-S-7l. Lukefahr, M. J., (l977) Varietal resistance to cotton insects. Beltwide Cotton Prod. Res. Conf., National Cotton Council, Memphis. Lukefahr, M. J., and D. F. Martin (l966) Cotton-plant pigments as a source of resistance to the bollworm and tobacco budworm. J. Econ. Entomol. 59:l76-l79. Lukefahr, M. J., D. F. Martin, and J. R. Meyer (l965) Plant resistance to five lepidoptera attacking cotton. J. Econ. Entomol. 58:5l6-5l8. Maley, F. W. (l902) Report on the boll worm. College Station, TX: Texas A&M University. McLane, M. A., E. H. Dustman, E. R. Carl, and D. L. Hughes (l978) Organochlorine insecticides and polychlorinated biphenyl residues l97l-l972. Pesticide Monitoring J. l2:22-25. Mehrle, P. M., and F. L. Mayer (l977) Bone development and growth of fish as affected by toxaphene. Pages 30l-3l4, Fate of Pollutants in the Air and Water Environments, edited by I. H. Suffett, Pt. 2 New York: John Wiley and Sons. Meredith, W. R., Jr. (l980) Use of insect resistant germplasm in reducing the cost of production in the l980s. Beltwide Cotton Prod. Res. Conf., National Cotton Council, Memphis, pp. 307-3l0. Meredith, W. R., Jr., and M. F. Schuster (l979) Tolerance of glabrous and pubescent cotton to tarnished plant bug. Crop Sci. l9:484-488. Metcalf, C. L., W. P. Flint, and R. L. Metcalf (l962) Destructive and Useful Insects, 4th ed. New York: McGraw Hill. Metcalf, R. L., and J. R. Sanborn (l975) Pesticides and environmental quality in Illinois. Bull. Illinois Natural History Survey 3l(9):38l-436. Metcalf, R. L., Po-Yung Lu, and S. Bowlus (l975) Degradation and environmental fate of l-(2,6-difluorobenzoyl)-3-(4-chlorophenyl) urea. J. Agric. Food Chem. 23:359-364. Metcalf, R. L. (l980) Changing role of insecticides in crop protection. Ann. Rev. Entomol. 25:2l9-256.

l26 Meyer, J. R. (l957) Origin and inheritance of D2 smoothness in upland cotton. J. Hered. 48:249-250. Meyer, J. R., and V. G. Meyer (l96l) Origin and inheritance of nectariless cotton. Crop Sci. l:l67-l69. Michigan Department of Agriculture (l965) Plant Pest Control Programs. Annual Report—l965. Plant Industries Division. Lansing: Michigan Department of Agriculture. Milam, W. R., J. N. Jenkins, W. L. Parrott, and J. C. McCarty, Jr. (l980) Inheritance of tarnished plant bug resistance and its association with agronomic properties in a cross of Deltapine 7l46N by Bulgarian 3279. Beltwide Cotton Prod. Res. Conf., National Cotton Council, Memphis, pp. 89-90. (Abstr.) Miller, D. H., and K. E. Carpenter (l979) Revised Report on the Environmental Evaluation of the Boll Weevil Control Trial Programs. KFR 229-79, 7 December l979. Ketron, Inc., Arlington, VA. (This appears as attachment B in APHIS l98la.) Mitchell, E. B., and D. D. Hardee (l974) In-field traps: a new concept in survey and suppression of low population of bollweevils. J. Econ. Entomol. 67:506-508. Mitchell, E. B., M. Jacobsen, and A. H. Baumhover (l975) Heliothis spp. Disruption of pheromonal communication with (Z)-9-tetradecen-l-a format. Environ. Entomol. 4:577-579. Mitchell, E. B., M. E. Merkl, J. E. Wright, T. B. Davich, and R. F. Heiser (l980) Sterility of boll weevils in the field following treatment with diflubenzuron and gamma irradiation. J. Econ. Entomol. 73:824-826. Murray, J. C., L. M. Verhalen, and D. E. Bryan (l965) Observations on the feeding preference of the striped blister beetle Epicauta vitatta (Fabricus) to glanded and glandless cottons. Crop Sci. 5:l89. Namken, L. N., M. D. Heilman, J. N. Jenkins, and P. A. Miller (l98l) Host plant resistance and modified cotton culture, ^ri Cotton Insect Management with Special Reference to the Boll Weevil. USDA Agricultural Handbook Series (in press). National Academy of Sciences, Committee on Scholarly Communication with the People's Republic of China, Rept. No. 2 (l977) Insect control in the People's Republic of China. Washington, DC. National Research Council (l969) Principles of Plant and Animal Pest Control. Volume 3. Insect-Pest Management and Control. Washington, DC: National Academy of Sciences. National Research Council (l975) Pest Control: An Assessment of Present and Alternative Technologies. Volume 3: Cotton Pest Control. Washington, DC: National Academy of Sciences. Newsom, L. D., and J. R. Brazzel (l968) Pests and their control. Pages 367-405, Advances in Production and Utilization of Quality Cotton: Principles and Practices, edited by F. C. Elliott, M. Hoover, and W. K. Porter, Jr. Ames: Iowa State University Press. Odum, E. P. (l97l) Fundamentals of Ecology. Third Edition, Philadelphia: W. B. Saunders Co. Olivier, J. E., A. B. Demilo, R. T. Brown, and D. G. McHuffey (l977) AI-63223: a highly effective boll weevil sterilant. J. Econ. Entomol. 70:286-288.

l27 Parencia, C. R., Jr. (l978) One hundred twenty years of research in cotton insects in the United States. USDA Handbook No. 5l5. Agricultural Research Service. Washington, DC: U.S. Department of Agriculture. Parrott, W. L., J. N. Jenkins, and J. C. McCarty, Jr. (l98l) Performance of the high gossypol strain test under artificial infestation of tobacco budworm. Beltwide Cotton Prod. Res. Conf., National Cotton Council, Memphis. (in press) (Abstr.) Parrott, W. L., J. N. Jenkins, and D. B. Smith (l973) Frego bract cotton and normal bract cotton: How morphology affects control of boll weevils by insecticides. J. Econ. Entomol. 66:222-225. Parvin, D. W., Jr., F. A. Harris, and M. L. Foster (l977) Cotton insect control in Mississippi. Beltwide Cotton Prod. Res. Conf., National Cotton Council, Memphis, pp. 2l2-2l4. Phillips, J. R., A. P. Gutierrez, and P. L. Adkisson (l980) General accomplishments toward better insect control in cotton. Pages l24-l50, New Technology of Pest Control, edited by C B. Huffaker. New York: John Wiley and Sons. Pimentel, D. (l97l) Ecological Effects of Pesticides on Non-Target Species. Executive Office of the President, Office of Science and Technology. Washington, D.C. Pimentel, D. (l973) Extent of pesticide use, food supply, and pollution. J. N.Y. Entomol. Soc. LXXXI l3-33. Post, G. B. (l924) Boll weevil control by airplane. Ga. State College Agric. Bull. 30l, Athens, Ga. Proverbs, M. D. (l969) Induced sterilization and control of insects. Ann. Rev. Entomol. l7:8l-l02. Proverbs, M. D. (l970) Procedures and experiments in population suppression on the Codling moth, Lasecyresia pomonella (L.) in British Columbia orchards by release of radiation-sterilized moths. Manitoba Entomol. 4:46-52. Reuber, M. D. (l979) Carcinogenicity of toxaphene: a review. J. Toxicol. Environ. Health 5:729-748. Reynolds, H. T., P. L. Adkisson, and R. F. Smith (l975) Cotton insect pest management. Pages 379-443, Introduction to Insect Pest Management, edited by R. L. Metcalf and W. H. Luckmann. New York: John Wiley and Sons. Robinson, S. H., D. A. Wolfenbarger, and R. H. Dilday (l980) Antixenosis of smooth leaf cotton to the ovipositional response of tobacco budworm. Crop Sci. 20:646-649. Roussel, J. S., and D. F. Glower (l955) Resistance to the chlorinated hydrocarbon insecticides in the boll weevil (Anthonomus grandis Boh.) La. Agric. Exp. Stn. Cir. 4l. Rummel, D. R., and R. E. Frisbie (l978) Suppression of potentially overwintering boll weevils as a pest management practice. Pages 39-49, The Boll Weevil: Management Strategies. Southern Cooperative Series Bulletin 228. Rummel, D. R., J. R. White, S. C. Carroll, and G. R. Pruitt (l980) Pheromone trapping index system for predicting need for overwintering boll weevil control. J. Econ. Entomol. (in press)

l28 Sanborn, J. R., R. L. Metcalf, W. N. Bruce, and Po-Yung Lu (l976) The fate of chlordane and toxaphene in a terrestrial aquatic model ecosystem. Environ. Entomol. 5:533-538. Sappenfield, W. P., and R. H. Dilday (l980) Breeding high terpenoid cottons: The l978 regional tests. Beltwide Cotton Prod. Res. Conf., National Cotton Council, Memphis, pp. 92-93. Sappenfield, W. P., L. G. Stokes, and K. Harrendorf (l974) Selecting cotton plants with high square gossypol. Beltwide Cotton Prod. Res. Conf., National Cotton Council, Memphis, pp. 87-92. Schuster, M. F., and F. G. Maxwell (l974) The impact of nectariless cotton on plant bugs, bollworms, and beneficial insects. Beltwide Cotton Prod. Res. Conf., National Cotton Council, Memphis, pp. 86-87. Science and Education Administration (l98l) Biological Evaluation of Alternative Beltwide Boll Weevil/Cotton Insect Management Programs. Overall Evaluation, Appendix A. SEA Staff Report, April. Serebrovsky, A. S. (l940) Possible new methods for controlling insect pest populations. Zool. Zh. l9:6l8-630. Shepard, H. A. (l95l) The Chemistry and Action of Pesticides. New York: McGraw Hill. Shorey, H. H., R. S. Kaae, and L. K. Gaston (l974) Sex pheromones of Lepidoptera. Development of a method for pheromonal control of Pectinophora gossypiella in cotton. J. Econ. Entomol. 67:347-350. Singh, I. D., and J. B. Weaver (l972) Studies on the heritability of gossypol in leaves and flower buds of Gossypium. Crop Sci. l2:294-297. Smith, R. P., and H. T. Reynolds (l972) Effects of manipulation of cotton agroecosystem on insect pest populations. Pages 373-406, The Careless Technology - Ecology and International Development, edited by M. T. Farvar and J. P. Milton. Garden City, NY: Natural History Press. Spears, J. F. (l974) A Review of Federal Domestic Plant Quarantines. USDA-APHIS-PPQ, Hyattsville, MD. Jan l974. Stanford Research Institute (l973) Refined Cost Estimates for a Beltwide Eradication of Boll Weevil. P. Stent and A. Korsack, Stanford Research Institute, Project 2372. Unpublished report to Cotton, Incorporated. Thomas, F. L., W. L. Owen, J. C. Gaines, and F. Sherman III (l929) Bollweevil control by airplane dusting. Tex. Agric. Exp. Stn. Bull. 394. Todd, R. L. (ed.) (l98l) Nutrient Cycling in Agricultural Ecosystems. (In press) Toscano, N. C,, A. J. Mueller, V. Sevacherian, R. K. Sharma, T. Nilus, and H. T. Reynolds (l974) Insecticide applications based on Hexalure trap catches versus automatic schedule treatments for pink bollworm. J. Econ. Entomol. 67:522-524. Townsend, C. H. T. (l895) Report on the Mexican cotton boll weevil in Texas (Anthonomus grandis Boh.). Insect Life 7:295-309. Tumlinson, J., R. C. Gueldner, D. D. Hardee, A. C. Thompson, P. A. Hedin, and J. P. Minyard (l97l) Identification and synthesis of

l29 the four compounds comprising the bollweevil sex attractant. J. Org. Chem. 36:26l6-262l. USDA (l965) Quantities of pesticides used by farmers in l964. Agric. Econ. Rept. No. l3l. USDA (l970) Quantities of pesticides used by farmers in l966. Agric. Econ. Rept. No. l79. USDA (l974) Quantities of pesticides used by farmers in l97l. Agric. Econ. Rept. No. 252. USDA (l978) Farmers' Use of Pesticides in l976. USDA Agric. Econ. Rept. No. 4l8. USDA (l979) Cotton-insect research and control. 32nd Annu. Conf. Rept. Phoenix, AZ. Jan. 8-9. USDA (l98la) Agricultural Statistics l980. Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office. USDA (l98lb) Executive Overview of Alternative Boll Weevil/Cotton Insect Management Programs, May. U.S. DHEW (l969) Report on the Secretary's Commission on Pesticides and Their Relationship to Environmental Health. Washington, DC: Department of Health, Education, and Welfare. Van den Bosch, R., and K. A. Hagen (l966) Predaceous and parasitic arthropods in California cotton fields. Calif. Agric. Exp. Stn. Bull. 820. Van den Bosch, R. (l978) The Pesticide Conspiracy. Garden City, NY: Doubleday. Verloop, A., and C. D. Ferrell (l977) Benzoylphenyl urea - a new group of larvicides interfering with chitin synthesis. Pages 237-270, Pesticide Chemistry in the 20th Century. Am. Chem. Soc. Symp. Ser. No. 37. Washington, DC: Am. Chem. Soc. Walker, J. K., Jr., and G. A. Niles (l97l) Population dynamics of the boll weevil and modified cotton types. Texas Agric. Exp. Stn. Bull. ll09. Walker, J. K., Jr., R. E. Frisbie, and G. A. Niles (l978) A changing perspective: Heliothis in short-season cottons in Texas. Entomol. Soc. Amer. Bull. 24:385-39l. Wallner, W. E. (l974) Gypsy Moth. Forest Pest Leaflet No. 3. Cooperative Extension Bulletin E-78. E. Lansing: Michigan State University. Wellinga, K., R. Mulder, and J. J. Van Daalen (l973) Synthesis and laboratory evaluation of l-(2,6-disubstituted benzoyl)-3-phenyl ureas, a new class of insecticides. II. influence of acyl moiety on insecticidal activity. J. Agric. Food Chem. 2l:993-998. Whitcomb, W. H., and K. Bell (l964) Predaceous insects, spiders, and mites of Arkansas cotton fields. Arkansas Agr. Exp. Stn. Bull. 690. Whitten, M. J., and G. G. Foster (l975) Genetic methods of pest control. Annu. Rev. Entomol. 20l:46l-476. Wiersma, G. B., H. Tai, and P. F. Sand (l972) Pesticide residue levels in soils, FY l969. Pesticide Monitoring J. 6:l94-228. Wilson, F. D., and J. A. Lee (l976) Interrelationships among gland density, gossypol content, and lint and seed characters in cotton. Crop Sci. l6:860-86l.

l30 Wolfenbarger, D. A., M. J. Lukefahr, and H. M. Graham (l973) LD5o values of methyl parathion and endrin to the tobacco budworm collected in the Americas and hypothesis on the spread of resistance in these lepidoptera to these insecticides. J. Econ. Entomol. 66:2l2-2l6. Wolfenbarger, D. A., J. A. Harding, and J. W. Davis (l977) Isomers of (3-phenoxyphenyl)-methyl (+)cis-trans-3-(2,2-dichloroethyl)-2, 2-dimethylcyclopropanecarboxylate against boll weevils and tobacco budworm. J. Econ. Entomol. 70:226-228. Wright, J. E., and E. Villavaso (l98l) Boll Weevil Sterility. l£ Cotton insect Management with Special Reference to the Boll Weevil. USDA Handbook Series (in press).

Cotton Boll Weevil: An Evaluation of USDA Programs : a Report Get This Book
×
 Cotton Boll Weevil: An Evaluation of USDA Programs : a Report
MyNAP members save 10% online.
Login or Register to save!
Download Free PDF

READ FREE ONLINE

  1. ×

    Welcome to OpenBook!

    You're looking at OpenBook, NAP.edu's online reading room since 1999. Based on feedback from you, our users, we've made some improvements that make it easier than ever to read thousands of publications on our website.

    Do you want to take a quick tour of the OpenBook's features?

    No Thanks Take a Tour »
  2. ×

    Show this book's table of contents, where you can jump to any chapter by name.

    « Back Next »
  3. ×

    ...or use these buttons to go back to the previous chapter or skip to the next one.

    « Back Next »
  4. ×

    Jump up to the previous page or down to the next one. Also, you can type in a page number and press Enter to go directly to that page in the book.

    « Back Next »
  5. ×

    To search the entire text of this book, type in your search term here and press Enter.

    « Back Next »
  6. ×

    Share a link to this book page on your preferred social network or via email.

    « Back Next »
  7. ×

    View our suggested citation for this chapter.

    « Back Next »
  8. ×

    Ready to take your reading offline? Click here to buy this book in print or download it as a free PDF, if available.

    « Back Next »
Stay Connected!