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Web URL(s): | https://archive.lib.msu.edu/tic/gcman/article/2009apr116.pdf Last checked: 05/18/2009 Requires: PDF Reader |
Access Restriction: | Certain MSU-hosted archive URLs may be restricted to legacy database members. |
Publication Type:
| Professional |
Author(s): | Peck, Daniel C.;
Olmstead, Daniel |
Author Affiliation: | Peck: Assistant Professor, Soil Insect Ecology and Turfgrass Entomology; Olmstead: Research Support Specialist, Department of Entomology, New York State Agricultural Experiment Station, Cornell University, Geneva, New York |
Title: | Geographic distribution and local incidence of invasive crane flies in the Northeast: The European and common crane fly are both established in western New York state and are expected to continue spreading throughout the Northeast |
Section: | Research Other records with the "Research" Section
|
Source: | Golf Course Management. Vol. 77, No. 4, April 2009, p. 116-122. |
Publishing Information: | Lawrence, KS: Golf Course Superintendents Association of America |
# of Pages: | 7 |
Keywords: | TIC Keywords: Insect control; Tipula paludosa; Injuries by insects; Geographical distribution; Life cycle
|
Geographic Terms: | Northeast United States and Canada |
Abstract/Contents: | Presents a study conducted to "ascertain how widespread the insects were across [New York]" and to "ascertain how widespread the insects were at sites of local establishment." Details methods and materials used in the study, stating that researchers "obtained locality data from specimens collected across New York state from 2004 to 2006. All identifications were based on adult specimens according to external characteristics such as distance between the eyes, number of antennal segments, male genitalia and the ration of wing to abdomen length in females." Reports that "Tipula paludosa was detected at a total of 27 locations in four counties and 11 municipalities...In contrast, T. oleracea occurred in two geographic regions: western New York and Long Island." |
Language: | English |
References: | 10 |
Note: | Pictures, color Figures Tables Graphs Partial reprint appears in GCSAA's Research Synopsis: Completed Projects Published Between 2007-2009, [2010], p. 34-35 |
| ASA/CSSA/SSSA Citation (Crop Science-Like - may be incomplete): Peck, D. C., and D. Olmstead. 2009. Geographic distribution and local incidence of invasive crane flies in the Northeast: The European and common crane fly are both established in western New York state and are expected to continue spreading throughout the Northeast. Golf Course Manage. 77(4):p. 116-122. |
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| Web URL(s): https://archive.lib.msu.edu/tic/gcman/article/2009apr116.pdf Last checked: 05/18/2009 Requires: PDF Reader |
| MSU catalog number: b2193862a |
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