Chapter 16. Environmental Signals, the Neuroendocrine System, and the Regulation of Larval Diapause in the Southwestern Corn Borer, Diatraea grandiosella

  1. Ruth Porter,
  2. Geralyn M. Collins
  1. G. Michael Chippendale

Published Online: 30 MAY 2008

DOI: 10.1002/9780470720851.ch16

Ciba Foundation Symposium 104 - Photoperiodic Regulation of Insect and Molluscan Hormones

Ciba Foundation Symposium 104 - Photoperiodic Regulation of Insect and Molluscan Hormones

How to Cite

Chippendale, G. M. (2008) Environmental Signals, the Neuroendocrine System, and the Regulation of Larval Diapause in the Southwestern Corn Borer, Diatraea grandiosella, in Ciba Foundation Symposium 104 - Photoperiodic Regulation of Insect and Molluscan Hormones (eds R. Porter and G. M. Collins), John Wiley & Sons, Ltd., Chichester, UK. doi: 10.1002/9780470720851.ch16

Author Information

  1. Department of Entomology, 1–87 Agriculture Building, University of Missouri, Columbia, Missouri 65211, USA

Publication History

  1. Published Online: 30 MAY 2008
  2. Published Print: 1 JAN 1984

ISBN Information

Print ISBN: 9780272797518

Online ISBN: 9780470720851

SEARCH

Options for accessing this content:

  • If you have access to this content through a society membership, please first log in to your society website.
  • Login via other institutional login options http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/login-options.
  • You can purchase online access to this Chapter for a 24-hour period (price varies by title)
    • If you already have a Wiley Online Library or Wiley InterScience user account: login above and proceed to purchase the article.
    • New Users: Please register, then proceed to purchase the article.

If your institution is a registered Wiley Online Library customer, you can log in under your institution's name to see our content. This access is provided by Shibboleth or Athens.

Type your institution's name in the box below. If your institution is a Wiley customer, it will appear in the list of suggested institutions.

Please register to:

  • Save publications, articles and searches
  • Get email alerts
  • Get all the benefits mentioned below!

Register now >