GloBI interaction
parasiteOf
Subject is a parasite (living on/in object). Generic parasitism term — use parasitoidOf when subject is specifically a parasitoid.
46 claims with this interaction type. Vocabulary aligned with the Global Biotic Interactions Relations Ontology.
Top subjects
- Meloidogyne spp. (7)
- Coelioxys spp. (4)
- Nomada spp. (2)
- Bombus (Psithyrus) spp. (2)
- Psithyrus spp. (2)
- Glomeromycota (phylum) (2)
- Globodera pallida (1)
- Pyrolaceae (family) (1)
- Phoridae (family) (1)
- Cochliomyia hominivorax (1)
- Globodera rostochiensis (1)
- Hyperparasitoid spp. (1)
Top objects
- Bombus spp. (9)
- Solanum tuberosum · Irish Potato (3)
- Capsicum annuum · Chilli / Paprika (3)
- Megachile spp. (2)
- Ectomycorrhizal fungi (family) (1)
- Azteca instabilis (1)
- Gentianaceae (family) (1)
- Burmanniaceae (family) (1)
- Hylaeus (Nesoprosopis) spp. (1)
- Macropis spp. (1)
- Eucerini (tribe) (1)
- Colletes spp. (1)
Recent claims (top 200)
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“reduces the incidence of diseases and nematodes”
Sukprakarn S., Juntakool S., Huang R., Kalb T. (2006) #6496217
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“Les déprédateurs communs sont les nématodes”
Kouamé C., Kamga R., Wanduku N., Chendjou R. #6496191
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“les nématodes à galles posent surtout des problèmes”
Kouamé C., Kamga R., Wanduku N., Chendjou R. #6496172
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“root knot nematode”
Palada M.C., Wu D.-L. · p. 8 #6496165
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“stunting, yellowing and wilting; roots develop knots (galls)”
Dhillon N.P.S., Lin L.-J., Srimat S., Laenoi S., Ramasamy S., Kenyon L., Sheu Z.-M., Mecozzi M. (2021) · p. 7 #6496054
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“Meloidogyne javanica ... Cucumis melo”
University of Guam, College of Natural and Applied Sciences (2022) · Index of Plant Diseases in Guam · p. 18 #6496017
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“Meloidogyne incognita Solanum melongena”
University of Guam, College of Natural and Applied Sciences (2022) · Index of Plant Diseases in Guam · p. 18 #6496016
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“Root Knot Nematode (Meloidogyne spp.)”
Ali S. (2018) · p. 8 #6495825
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“Potato Cyst Nematode (PCN) Globodera spp.”
Ali S. (2018) · p. 8 #6495824
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“Potato Cyst nematodes are an important potato pest”
Ali S. (2018) · p. 8 #6495823
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“root-knot nematodes (Meloidogyne spp.) are virtually impossible to eradicate”
Nelson, Scot (2015) · p. 11 #6495719
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“Striga, a parasitic vine that devastatingly reduces corn yields in Africa”
Kuepper G., Dodson M., Duncan J. (2016) · p. 6 #6495608
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“Meloidogyne graminicola, parasitic on rice in Indonesia”
Jones J.T., Haegeman A., Danchin E.G.J., Gaur H.S., Helder J., Jones M.G.K., Kikuchi T., Manzanilla-Lopez R., Palomares-Rius J.E., Wesemael W.M.L., Perry R.N. (2013) · Top 10 plant-parasitic nematodes in molecular plant pathology · p. 959 #6495278
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“Alterations in peroxidase activity... induced by Nacobbus aberrans in chilli”
Jones J.T., Haegeman A., Danchin E.G.J., Gaur H.S., Helder J., Jones M.G.K., Kikuchi T., Manzanilla-Lopez R., Palomares-Rius J.E., Wesemael W.M.L., Perry R.N. (2013) · Top 10 plant-parasitic nematodes in molecular plant pathology · p. 959 #6495276
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“δ15N and δ13C in leaves of four green pyroloid species”
Smith S.E., Read D.J. (2008) · Mycorrhizal Symbiosis, Third Edition #6494194
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“fly is in the family Phoridae and is known as a decapitating fly”
Vandermeer J.H. (2009) · The Ecology of Agroecosystems · p. 234 #6494030
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“white-tailed deer populations, which were partly regulated by the parasite”
Pedigo L.P., Rice M.E. (2009) · Entomology and Pest Management, Fourth Edition · p. 589 #6493669
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“Native hyperparasitoids attack the aphid parasitoid Aphidius matricariae during spring and summer”
Andow D.A., Ragsdale D.W., Nyvall R.F. (1997) · Ecological Interactions and Biological Control · p. 143 #6493054
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“Lambs which suffered clinically obvious damage had a mean weight gain of 12.18 kg”
Dent D. (2000) · Insect Pest Management, 2nd Edition · p. 69 #6492898
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“releases toxins that kills the host within 24-48 hours”
Eldor A. Paul (editor); R.P. Voroney, R.J. Heck, Ken Killham, Jim Prosser, D. Lee Taylor, Robert L. Sinsabaugh, David C. Coleman, Diana H. Wall, Janice E. Thies, Ellen Kandeler, Serita D. Frey, Alain F. Plante, Maddie M. Stone, William B. McGill, Sherri J. Morris, Christopher B. Blackwood, R. Balestrini, E. Lumini, R. Borriello, V. Bianciotto, William Horwath, Claire Chenu, Cornelia Rumpel, Johannes Lehmann, G.P. Robertson, P.M. Groffman, Peter J. Bottomley, David D. Myrold, Michael A. Kertesz, Emmanuel Frossard, William J. Parton, Stephen J. Del Grosso, E. Carol Adair, Susan M. Lutz, Harold P. Collins, Alex R. Crump, Vanessa L. Bailey (2015) · Soil Microbiology, Ecology, and Biochemistry (Fourth Edition) #6492715
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“mycorrhizas in roots of achlorophyllous members of the Burmanniaceae and Gentianaceae are formed by members of the Glomeromycota”
Smith S.E., Read D. (2008) · Mycorrhizal Symbiosis, Third Edition · p. 6 #6492655
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“mycorrhizas in roots of achlorophyllous members of the Burmanniaceae and Gentianaceae are formed by members of the Glomeromycota”
Smith S.E., Read D. (2008) · Mycorrhizal Symbiosis, Third Edition · p. 6 #6492654
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“five Hawaiian species of Hylaeus (Nesoprosopis) reported to be parasites of other species of the same subgenus”
Michener C.D. (2007) · The Bees of the World, Second Edition · p. 35 #6492521
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“In the social parasite Bombus (Psithyrus) the number ranges from 6 to 18”
Michener C.D. (2007) · The Bees of the World, Second Edition · p. 41 #6492520
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“Epeoloides, which parasitizes Macropis (Melittidae)”
Michener C.D. (2007) · The Bees of the World, Second Edition · p. 35 #6492519
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“Epeolus on Colletes, Triepeolus mostly on Eucerini”
Michener C.D. (2007) · The Bees of the World, Second Edition · p. 35 #6492518
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“Epeolus on Colletes, Triepeolus mostly on Eucerini”
Michener C.D. (2007) · The Bees of the World, Second Edition · p. 35 #6492517
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“a few of the many Coelioxys species attack Anthophora, Centris, Euglossa”
Michener C.D. (2007) · The Bees of the World, Second Edition · p. 35 #6492516
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“a few of the many Coelioxys species attack Anthophora, Centris, Euglossa”
Michener C.D. (2007) · The Bees of the World, Second Edition · p. 35 #6492515
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“Coelioxys funeraria Smith parasitizing two different-sized species of Megachile in Michigan”
Michener C.D. (2007) · The Bees of the World, Second Edition · p. 35 #6492514
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“cephalic secretions of the males are chemically similar to Dufour's gland volatiles of the females of the host species, Andrena or Melitta”
Michener C.D. (2007) · The Bees of the World, Second Edition · p. 35 #6492513
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“cephalic secretions of males are chemically similar to Dufour's gland volatiles”
Michener C.D. (2007) · The Bees of the World, Second Edition · p. 35 #6492512
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“young larva of Coelioxys…has a large, usually more or less prognathous, sclerotized head and sickle-shaped mandibles”
Michener C.D. (2007) · The Bees of the World, Second Edition · p. 34 #6492485
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“females of some mostly cleptoparasitic genera such as Sphecodes destroy the egg of the host and replace it with their own”
Michener C.D. (2007) · The Bees of the World, Second Edition · p. 31 #6492484
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“In the genus Bombus, the subgenus Psithyrus is entirely parasitic”
Michener C.D. (2007) · The Bees of the World, Second Edition · p. 30 #6492483
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“dramatic decrease in feral honey bee populations...due to introduction...of mites such as Varroa”
Michener C.D. (2007) · The Bees of the World, Second Edition · p. 4 #6492477
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“may be an obligate parasite of its close relative B. ruderarius”
Goulson D. (2010) · Bumblebees: Behaviour, Ecology, and Conservation (Second Edition) · p. 76 #6492452
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“rates of 20–40% for invasion of B. lapidarius nests”
Goulson D. (2010) · Bumblebees: Behaviour, Ecology, and Conservation (Second Edition) · p. 78 #6492451
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“Psithyrus female will lay eggs reared by bumblebee workers as their own”
Goulson D. (2010) · Bumblebees: Behaviour, Ecology, and Conservation (Second Edition) · p. 77 #6492450
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“beetle climbs onto a flower, hitches a ride to a nest”
Goulson D. (2010) · Bumblebees: Behaviour, Ecology, and Conservation (Second Edition) · p. 74 #6492449
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“She invades bee nests and lays her eggs in the pupal cocoons”
Goulson D. (2010) · Bumblebees: Behaviour, Ecology, and Conservation (Second Edition) · p. 65 #6492423
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“leads to the death of the host bee about 10–12 days after infection”
Goulson D. (2010) · Bumblebees: Behaviour, Ecology, and Conservation (Second Edition) · p. 62 #6492422
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“L. buchneri is truly parasitic, feeding directly on the haemolymph of its host”
Goulson D. (2010) · Bumblebees: Behaviour, Ecology, and Conservation (Second Edition) · p. 72 #6492421
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“up to 165 deutonymphs on a single B. lapidarius queen”
Goulson D. (2010) · Bumblebees: Behaviour, Ecology, and Conservation (Second Edition) · p. 72 #6492420
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“Infected queens become increasingly sluggish and eventually die in spring or early summer”
Goulson D. (2010) · Bumblebees: Behaviour, Ecology, and Conservation (Second Edition) · p. 71 #6492419
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“they enter the nest, kill the queen, and take over her role”
Goulson D. (2010) · Bumblebees: Behaviour, Ecology, and Conservation (Second Edition) · p. 12 #6492350