000 | 01470 a2200349 4500 | ||
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008 | 051207s xx 000 0 eng | ||
022 | _a1522-3264; | ||
050 | _aAC1.S5 | ||
082 | _a050 | ||
100 | _aStewart, Doug, | ||
245 | 0 |
_aGood Bugs Gone Bad. _cDoug Stewart. |
|
260 |
_bNational Wildlife, _c2005. |
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440 |
_aSIRS Enduring Issues 2006. _nArticle 39, _pScience, _x1522-3264; |
||
500 | _aArticles Contained in SIRS Enduring Issues 2006. | ||
500 | _aOriginally Published: Good Bugs Gone Bad, Aug./Sept. 2005; pp. 24-32. | ||
520 | _a"Just as an exotic plant can turn invasive when freed from the enemies that kept it in check back home, so too can an exotic biocontrol insect run amuck itself in the absence of the predators and competitors it evolved with." (NATIONAL WILDLIFE) This article examines how species introduced into the United States to control another species can, themselves, run out of control. | ||
599 | _aRecords created from non-MARC resource. | ||
650 | _aArgentine ant | ||
650 | _aAsian longhorned beetle | ||
650 | _aBeetles | ||
650 | _aFire ants | ||
650 | _aGypsy moth | ||
650 | _aInsects | ||
650 | _aInsects as biological pest control agents | ||
650 | _aInvasive plants | ||
650 | _aLadybugs | ||
650 | _aTermites | ||
650 | _aWasps | ||
650 | _aWhiteflies | ||
710 |
_aProQuest Information and Learning Company _tSIRS Enduring Issues 2006, _pScience. _x1522-3264; |
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942 | _c UKN | ||
999 |
_c37787 _d37787 |