Ontology type: schema:ScholarlyArticle
2020-02-08
AUTHORSAnjali Km. Prasad, Somnath Roy, Souvik Sen, Suzanne Neave, Akanksha Nagpal, Vinod Pandit
ABSTRACTTea is a perennial monoculture crop infested by approximately thousand species of pests. Conserving natural enemies is an important practice under non-conventional pest management strategy. In the present study, occurrence of spider population on tea in three different pest management practices has been studied in three different agro climatic region of Assam. The three pest management practices include: 1. Ecological Crop Management (ECM: wherein pest management is achieved with cultural practices, mechanical practices and biopesticide excluding synthetic pesticides); 2. Integrated pest management (IPM: includes recommended IPM practices with use of only CIB recommended approved dose of synthetic pesticides); 3. Garden practice (GP: involves normal practices being followed in tea garden). During the study, very high incidence of natural enemy population was recorded under ECM followed by IPM and the least with GP. Spiders are the most common predators and constituted about 50–90% of the total natural enemy count. Number of spiders captured during monsoon was significantly higher than pre-monsoon and post monsoon. Family Salticidae was found to be the dominant group among the recorded spider taxa. The study inferred that though ecologically managed plantations encourage the spider diversity along with different natural enemies, integrated management practices can also be adopted by conventional garden for better natural enemy population if going to ECM is not at all been an option. More... »
PAGES629-635
http://scigraph.springernature.com/pub.10.1007/s42690-020-00111-0
DOIhttp://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s42690-020-00111-0
DIMENSIONShttps://app.dimensions.ai/details/publication/pub.1124682362
JSON-LD is the canonical representation for SciGraph data.
TIP: You can open this SciGraph record using an external JSON-LD service: JSON-LD Playground Google SDTT
[
{
"@context": "https://springernature.github.io/scigraph/jsonld/sgcontext.json",
"about": [
{
"id": "http://purl.org/au-research/vocabulary/anzsrc-for/2008/06",
"inDefinedTermSet": "http://purl.org/au-research/vocabulary/anzsrc-for/2008/",
"name": "Biological Sciences",
"type": "DefinedTerm"
},
{
"id": "http://purl.org/au-research/vocabulary/anzsrc-for/2008/0608",
"inDefinedTermSet": "http://purl.org/au-research/vocabulary/anzsrc-for/2008/",
"name": "Zoology",
"type": "DefinedTerm"
}
],
"author": [
{
"affiliation": {
"alternateName": "Entomology Department, Tocklai Tea Research Institute, Tea Research Association, Cinnamara, 785008, Jorhat, Assam, India",
"id": "http://www.grid.ac/institutes/grid.482359.1",
"name": [
"Entomology Department, Tocklai Tea Research Institute, Tea Research Association, Cinnamara, 785008, Jorhat, Assam, India"
],
"type": "Organization"
},
"familyName": "Prasad",
"givenName": "Anjali Km.",
"id": "sg:person.014124035513.48",
"sameAs": [
"https://app.dimensions.ai/discover/publication?and_facet_researcher=ur.014124035513.48"
],
"type": "Person"
},
{
"affiliation": {
"alternateName": "Entomology Department, Tocklai Tea Research Institute, Tea Research Association, Cinnamara, 785008, Jorhat, Assam, India",
"id": "http://www.grid.ac/institutes/grid.482359.1",
"name": [
"Entomology Department, Tocklai Tea Research Institute, Tea Research Association, Cinnamara, 785008, Jorhat, Assam, India"
],
"type": "Organization"
},
"familyName": "Roy",
"givenName": "Somnath",
"id": "sg:person.01367760132.66",
"sameAs": [
"https://app.dimensions.ai/discover/publication?and_facet_researcher=ur.01367760132.66"
],
"type": "Person"
},
{
"affiliation": {
"alternateName": "Zoological Survey of India, Western Ghat Regional Centre, Jaferkhan Colony, Pin 673 006, Kozhikode, Kerala, India",
"id": "http://www.grid.ac/institutes/grid.473833.8",
"name": [
"Entomology Department, Tocklai Tea Research Institute, Tea Research Association, Cinnamara, 785008, Jorhat, Assam, India",
"Zoological Survey of India, Western Ghat Regional Centre, Jaferkhan Colony, Pin 673 006, Kozhikode, Kerala, India"
],
"type": "Organization"
},
"familyName": "Sen",
"givenName": "Souvik",
"id": "sg:person.011321071335.15",
"sameAs": [
"https://app.dimensions.ai/discover/publication?and_facet_researcher=ur.011321071335.15"
],
"type": "Person"
},
{
"affiliation": {
"alternateName": "CABI, Nosworthy Way, Wallingford, UK",
"id": "http://www.grid.ac/institutes/grid.418543.f",
"name": [
"CABI, Nosworthy Way, Wallingford, UK"
],
"type": "Organization"
},
"familyName": "Neave",
"givenName": "Suzanne",
"id": "sg:person.015516776513.13",
"sameAs": [
"https://app.dimensions.ai/discover/publication?and_facet_researcher=ur.015516776513.13"
],
"type": "Person"
},
{
"affiliation": {
"alternateName": "CABI - South Asia, NASC Complex, 2nd Floor, CG Block, D P Shastri Marg, Pusa, 110 012, New Delhi, India",
"id": "http://www.grid.ac/institutes/None",
"name": [
"CABI - South Asia, NASC Complex, 2nd Floor, CG Block, D P Shastri Marg, Pusa, 110 012, New Delhi, India"
],
"type": "Organization"
},
"familyName": "Nagpal",
"givenName": "Akanksha",
"id": "sg:person.011733514113.96",
"sameAs": [
"https://app.dimensions.ai/discover/publication?and_facet_researcher=ur.011733514113.96"
],
"type": "Person"
},
{
"affiliation": {
"alternateName": "CABI - South Asia, NASC Complex, 2nd Floor, CG Block, D P Shastri Marg, Pusa, 110 012, New Delhi, India",
"id": "http://www.grid.ac/institutes/None",
"name": [
"CABI - South Asia, NASC Complex, 2nd Floor, CG Block, D P Shastri Marg, Pusa, 110 012, New Delhi, India"
],
"type": "Organization"
},
"familyName": "Pandit",
"givenName": "Vinod",
"id": "sg:person.012665065763.52",
"sameAs": [
"https://app.dimensions.ai/discover/publication?and_facet_researcher=ur.012665065763.52"
],
"type": "Person"
}
],
"citation": [
{
"id": "sg:pub.10.1007/s10526-015-9691-2",
"sameAs": [
"https://app.dimensions.ai/details/publication/pub.1035513068",
"https://doi.org/10.1007/s10526-015-9691-2"
],
"type": "CreativeWork"
},
{
"id": "sg:pub.10.1007/978-1-4615-1377-3_11",
"sameAs": [
"https://app.dimensions.ai/details/publication/pub.1017985393",
"https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4615-1377-3_11"
],
"type": "CreativeWork"
},
{
"id": "sg:pub.10.1007/978-1-4020-6061-8_2",
"sameAs": [
"https://app.dimensions.ai/details/publication/pub.1038826532",
"https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4020-6061-8_2"
],
"type": "CreativeWork"
},
{
"id": "sg:pub.10.1007/978-981-10-1524-3",
"sameAs": [
"https://app.dimensions.ai/details/publication/pub.1044614386",
"https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-10-1524-3"
],
"type": "CreativeWork"
},
{
"id": "sg:pub.10.1017/s1742758400005166",
"sameAs": [
"https://app.dimensions.ai/details/publication/pub.1030155948",
"https://doi.org/10.1017/s1742758400005166"
],
"type": "CreativeWork"
}
],
"datePublished": "2020-02-08",
"datePublishedReg": "2020-02-08",
"description": "Tea is a perennial monoculture crop infested by approximately thousand species of pests. Conserving natural enemies is an important practice under non-conventional pest management strategy. In the present study, occurrence of spider population on tea in three different pest management practices has been studied in three different agro climatic region of Assam. The three pest management practices include: 1. Ecological Crop Management (ECM: wherein pest management is achieved with cultural practices, mechanical practices and biopesticide excluding synthetic pesticides); 2. Integrated pest management (IPM: includes recommended IPM practices with use of only CIB recommended approved dose of synthetic pesticides); 3. Garden practice (GP: involves normal practices being followed in tea garden). During the study, very high incidence of natural enemy population was recorded under ECM followed by IPM and the least with GP. Spiders are the most common predators and constituted about 50\u201390% of the total natural enemy count. Number of spiders captured during monsoon was significantly higher than pre-monsoon and post monsoon. Family Salticidae was found to be the dominant group among the recorded spider taxa. The study inferred that though ecologically managed plantations encourage the spider diversity along with different natural enemies, integrated management practices can also be adopted by conventional garden for better natural enemy population if going to ECM is not at all been an option.",
"genre": "article",
"id": "sg:pub.10.1007/s42690-020-00111-0",
"inLanguage": "en",
"isAccessibleForFree": false,
"isPartOf": [
{
"id": "sg:journal.1374185",
"issn": [
"1742-7584",
"1742-7592"
],
"name": "International Journal of Tropical Insect Science",
"publisher": "Springer Nature",
"type": "Periodical"
},
{
"issueNumber": "3",
"type": "PublicationIssue"
},
{
"type": "PublicationVolume",
"volumeNumber": "40"
}
],
"keywords": [
"pest management practices",
"natural enemy populations",
"different pest management practices",
"management practices",
"enemy populations",
"natural enemies",
"different agro-climatic regions",
"integrated pest management",
"species of pests",
"pest management strategies",
"agro-climatic regions",
"different natural enemies",
"number of spiders",
"crop management",
"monoculture crops",
"pest management",
"conventional gardens",
"tea plantations",
"spider populations",
"garden practices",
"important practice",
"management strategies",
"common predators",
"climatic regions",
"spider diversity",
"plantations",
"enemies",
"family Salticidae",
"spider fauna",
"crops",
"pests",
"IPM",
"post monsoon",
"practice",
"population",
"management",
"spiders",
"gardens",
"predators",
"dominant group",
"tea",
"species",
"Assam",
"Salticidae",
"diversity",
"fauna",
"spider taxa",
"monsoon",
"present study",
"special emphasis",
"impact",
"taxa",
"options",
"region",
"study",
"strategies",
"occurrence",
"high incidence",
"number",
"ECM",
"count",
"emphasis",
"incidence",
"group",
"GPs"
],
"name": "Impact of different pest management practices on natural enemy population in tea plantations of Assam special emphasis on spider fauna",
"pagination": "629-635",
"productId": [
{
"name": "dimensions_id",
"type": "PropertyValue",
"value": [
"pub.1124682362"
]
},
{
"name": "doi",
"type": "PropertyValue",
"value": [
"10.1007/s42690-020-00111-0"
]
}
],
"sameAs": [
"https://doi.org/10.1007/s42690-020-00111-0",
"https://app.dimensions.ai/details/publication/pub.1124682362"
],
"sdDataset": "articles",
"sdDatePublished": "2022-06-01T22:21",
"sdLicense": "https://scigraph.springernature.com/explorer/license/",
"sdPublisher": {
"name": "Springer Nature - SN SciGraph project",
"type": "Organization"
},
"sdSource": "s3://com-springernature-scigraph/baseset/20220601/entities/gbq_results/article/article_848.jsonl",
"type": "ScholarlyArticle",
"url": "https://doi.org/10.1007/s42690-020-00111-0"
}
]
Download the RDF metadata as: json-ld nt turtle xml License info
JSON-LD is a popular format for linked data which is fully compatible with JSON.
curl -H 'Accept: application/ld+json' 'https://scigraph.springernature.com/pub.10.1007/s42690-020-00111-0'
N-Triples is a line-based linked data format ideal for batch operations.
curl -H 'Accept: application/n-triples' 'https://scigraph.springernature.com/pub.10.1007/s42690-020-00111-0'
Turtle is a human-readable linked data format.
curl -H 'Accept: text/turtle' 'https://scigraph.springernature.com/pub.10.1007/s42690-020-00111-0'
RDF/XML is a standard XML format for linked data.
curl -H 'Accept: application/rdf+xml' 'https://scigraph.springernature.com/pub.10.1007/s42690-020-00111-0'
This table displays all metadata directly associated to this object as RDF triples.
188 TRIPLES
22 PREDICATES
95 URIs
82 LITERALS
6 BLANK NODES
Subject | Predicate | Object | |
---|---|---|---|
1 | sg:pub.10.1007/s42690-020-00111-0 | schema:about | anzsrc-for:06 |
2 | ″ | ″ | anzsrc-for:0608 |
3 | ″ | schema:author | Nfad7bda8fa5d4377bcfae18f13a67db1 |
4 | ″ | schema:citation | sg:pub.10.1007/978-1-4020-6061-8_2 |
5 | ″ | ″ | sg:pub.10.1007/978-1-4615-1377-3_11 |
6 | ″ | ″ | sg:pub.10.1007/978-981-10-1524-3 |
7 | ″ | ″ | sg:pub.10.1007/s10526-015-9691-2 |
8 | ″ | ″ | sg:pub.10.1017/s1742758400005166 |
9 | ″ | schema:datePublished | 2020-02-08 |
10 | ″ | schema:datePublishedReg | 2020-02-08 |
11 | ″ | schema:description | Tea is a perennial monoculture crop infested by approximately thousand species of pests. Conserving natural enemies is an important practice under non-conventional pest management strategy. In the present study, occurrence of spider population on tea in three different pest management practices has been studied in three different agro climatic region of Assam. The three pest management practices include: 1. Ecological Crop Management (ECM: wherein pest management is achieved with cultural practices, mechanical practices and biopesticide excluding synthetic pesticides); 2. Integrated pest management (IPM: includes recommended IPM practices with use of only CIB recommended approved dose of synthetic pesticides); 3. Garden practice (GP: involves normal practices being followed in tea garden). During the study, very high incidence of natural enemy population was recorded under ECM followed by IPM and the least with GP. Spiders are the most common predators and constituted about 50–90% of the total natural enemy count. Number of spiders captured during monsoon was significantly higher than pre-monsoon and post monsoon. Family Salticidae was found to be the dominant group among the recorded spider taxa. The study inferred that though ecologically managed plantations encourage the spider diversity along with different natural enemies, integrated management practices can also be adopted by conventional garden for better natural enemy population if going to ECM is not at all been an option. |
12 | ″ | schema:genre | article |
13 | ″ | schema:inLanguage | en |
14 | ″ | schema:isAccessibleForFree | false |
15 | ″ | schema:isPartOf | N68c8f514669d4574a8a42fe9b9a9d814 |
16 | ″ | ″ | Nc2ff31ae0cca4f02a265228aaf44e834 |
17 | ″ | ″ | sg:journal.1374185 |
18 | ″ | schema:keywords | Assam |
19 | ″ | ″ | ECM |
20 | ″ | ″ | GPs |
21 | ″ | ″ | IPM |
22 | ″ | ″ | Salticidae |
23 | ″ | ″ | agro-climatic regions |
24 | ″ | ″ | climatic regions |
25 | ″ | ″ | common predators |
26 | ″ | ″ | conventional gardens |
27 | ″ | ″ | count |
28 | ″ | ″ | crop management |
29 | ″ | ″ | crops |
30 | ″ | ″ | different agro-climatic regions |
31 | ″ | ″ | different natural enemies |
32 | ″ | ″ | different pest management practices |
33 | ″ | ″ | diversity |
34 | ″ | ″ | dominant group |
35 | ″ | ″ | emphasis |
36 | ″ | ″ | enemies |
37 | ″ | ″ | enemy populations |
38 | ″ | ″ | family Salticidae |
39 | ″ | ″ | fauna |
40 | ″ | ″ | garden practices |
41 | ″ | ″ | gardens |
42 | ″ | ″ | group |
43 | ″ | ″ | high incidence |
44 | ″ | ″ | impact |
45 | ″ | ″ | important practice |
46 | ″ | ″ | incidence |
47 | ″ | ″ | integrated pest management |
48 | ″ | ″ | management |
49 | ″ | ″ | management practices |
50 | ″ | ″ | management strategies |
51 | ″ | ″ | monoculture crops |
52 | ″ | ″ | monsoon |
53 | ″ | ″ | natural enemies |
54 | ″ | ″ | natural enemy populations |
55 | ″ | ″ | number |
56 | ″ | ″ | number of spiders |
57 | ″ | ″ | occurrence |
58 | ″ | ″ | options |
59 | ″ | ″ | pest management |
60 | ″ | ″ | pest management practices |
61 | ″ | ″ | pest management strategies |
62 | ″ | ″ | pests |
63 | ″ | ″ | plantations |
64 | ″ | ″ | population |
65 | ″ | ″ | post monsoon |
66 | ″ | ″ | practice |
67 | ″ | ″ | predators |
68 | ″ | ″ | present study |
69 | ″ | ″ | region |
70 | ″ | ″ | special emphasis |
71 | ″ | ″ | species |
72 | ″ | ″ | species of pests |
73 | ″ | ″ | spider diversity |
74 | ″ | ″ | spider fauna |
75 | ″ | ″ | spider populations |
76 | ″ | ″ | spider taxa |
77 | ″ | ″ | spiders |
78 | ″ | ″ | strategies |
79 | ″ | ″ | study |
80 | ″ | ″ | taxa |
81 | ″ | ″ | tea |
82 | ″ | ″ | tea plantations |
83 | ″ | schema:name | Impact of different pest management practices on natural enemy population in tea plantations of Assam special emphasis on spider fauna |
84 | ″ | schema:pagination | 629-635 |
85 | ″ | schema:productId | N78d990110afb481a8beb558949e77f98 |
86 | ″ | ″ | Ndb7ace517b924be0a6387abfa589d162 |
87 | ″ | schema:sameAs | https://app.dimensions.ai/details/publication/pub.1124682362 |
88 | ″ | ″ | https://doi.org/10.1007/s42690-020-00111-0 |
89 | ″ | schema:sdDatePublished | 2022-06-01T22:21 |
90 | ″ | schema:sdLicense | https://scigraph.springernature.com/explorer/license/ |
91 | ″ | schema:sdPublisher | N7bd60688070f42219fada33abb60642f |
92 | ″ | schema:url | https://doi.org/10.1007/s42690-020-00111-0 |
93 | ″ | sgo:license | sg:explorer/license/ |
94 | ″ | sgo:sdDataset | articles |
95 | ″ | rdf:type | schema:ScholarlyArticle |
96 | N0c89f0fd96b1477ca0f9d5fc4b88685b | rdf:first | sg:person.011733514113.96 |
97 | ″ | rdf:rest | Ned3a3d5ae1194b3bbd38051ea4f7b3c2 |
98 | N68c8f514669d4574a8a42fe9b9a9d814 | schema:volumeNumber | 40 |
99 | ″ | rdf:type | schema:PublicationVolume |
100 | N78d990110afb481a8beb558949e77f98 | schema:name | dimensions_id |
101 | ″ | schema:value | pub.1124682362 |
102 | ″ | rdf:type | schema:PropertyValue |
103 | N7bd60688070f42219fada33abb60642f | schema:name | Springer Nature - SN SciGraph project |
104 | ″ | rdf:type | schema:Organization |
105 | N7e4386d81be2443a9616f8927c3fe9c7 | rdf:first | sg:person.015516776513.13 |
106 | ″ | rdf:rest | N0c89f0fd96b1477ca0f9d5fc4b88685b |
107 | N8a848b5aed9c4bc68729ebfeb9385ff1 | rdf:first | sg:person.01367760132.66 |
108 | ″ | rdf:rest | Na379f47d77e34e52b7f54b0a3cff43c3 |
109 | Na379f47d77e34e52b7f54b0a3cff43c3 | rdf:first | sg:person.011321071335.15 |
110 | ″ | rdf:rest | N7e4386d81be2443a9616f8927c3fe9c7 |
111 | Nc2ff31ae0cca4f02a265228aaf44e834 | schema:issueNumber | 3 |
112 | ″ | rdf:type | schema:PublicationIssue |
113 | Ndb7ace517b924be0a6387abfa589d162 | schema:name | doi |
114 | ″ | schema:value | 10.1007/s42690-020-00111-0 |
115 | ″ | rdf:type | schema:PropertyValue |
116 | Ned3a3d5ae1194b3bbd38051ea4f7b3c2 | rdf:first | sg:person.012665065763.52 |
117 | ″ | rdf:rest | rdf:nil |
118 | Nfad7bda8fa5d4377bcfae18f13a67db1 | rdf:first | sg:person.014124035513.48 |
119 | ″ | rdf:rest | N8a848b5aed9c4bc68729ebfeb9385ff1 |
120 | anzsrc-for:06 | schema:inDefinedTermSet | anzsrc-for: |
121 | ″ | schema:name | Biological Sciences |
122 | ″ | rdf:type | schema:DefinedTerm |
123 | anzsrc-for:0608 | schema:inDefinedTermSet | anzsrc-for: |
124 | ″ | schema:name | Zoology |
125 | ″ | rdf:type | schema:DefinedTerm |
126 | sg:journal.1374185 | schema:issn | 1742-7584 |
127 | ″ | ″ | 1742-7592 |
128 | ″ | schema:name | International Journal of Tropical Insect Science |
129 | ″ | schema:publisher | Springer Nature |
130 | ″ | rdf:type | schema:Periodical |
131 | sg:person.011321071335.15 | schema:affiliation | grid-institutes:grid.473833.8 |
132 | ″ | schema:familyName | Sen |
133 | ″ | schema:givenName | Souvik |
134 | ″ | schema:sameAs | https://app.dimensions.ai/discover/publication?and_facet_researcher=ur.011321071335.15 |
135 | ″ | rdf:type | schema:Person |
136 | sg:person.011733514113.96 | schema:affiliation | grid-institutes:None |
137 | ″ | schema:familyName | Nagpal |
138 | ″ | schema:givenName | Akanksha |
139 | ″ | schema:sameAs | https://app.dimensions.ai/discover/publication?and_facet_researcher=ur.011733514113.96 |
140 | ″ | rdf:type | schema:Person |
141 | sg:person.012665065763.52 | schema:affiliation | grid-institutes:None |
142 | ″ | schema:familyName | Pandit |
143 | ″ | schema:givenName | Vinod |
144 | ″ | schema:sameAs | https://app.dimensions.ai/discover/publication?and_facet_researcher=ur.012665065763.52 |
145 | ″ | rdf:type | schema:Person |
146 | sg:person.01367760132.66 | schema:affiliation | grid-institutes:grid.482359.1 |
147 | ″ | schema:familyName | Roy |
148 | ″ | schema:givenName | Somnath |
149 | ″ | schema:sameAs | https://app.dimensions.ai/discover/publication?and_facet_researcher=ur.01367760132.66 |
150 | ″ | rdf:type | schema:Person |
151 | sg:person.014124035513.48 | schema:affiliation | grid-institutes:grid.482359.1 |
152 | ″ | schema:familyName | Prasad |
153 | ″ | schema:givenName | Anjali Km. |
154 | ″ | schema:sameAs | https://app.dimensions.ai/discover/publication?and_facet_researcher=ur.014124035513.48 |
155 | ″ | rdf:type | schema:Person |
156 | sg:person.015516776513.13 | schema:affiliation | grid-institutes:grid.418543.f |
157 | ″ | schema:familyName | Neave |
158 | ″ | schema:givenName | Suzanne |
159 | ″ | schema:sameAs | https://app.dimensions.ai/discover/publication?and_facet_researcher=ur.015516776513.13 |
160 | ″ | rdf:type | schema:Person |
161 | sg:pub.10.1007/978-1-4020-6061-8_2 | schema:sameAs | https://app.dimensions.ai/details/publication/pub.1038826532 |
162 | ″ | ″ | https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4020-6061-8_2 |
163 | ″ | rdf:type | schema:CreativeWork |
164 | sg:pub.10.1007/978-1-4615-1377-3_11 | schema:sameAs | https://app.dimensions.ai/details/publication/pub.1017985393 |
165 | ″ | ″ | https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4615-1377-3_11 |
166 | ″ | rdf:type | schema:CreativeWork |
167 | sg:pub.10.1007/978-981-10-1524-3 | schema:sameAs | https://app.dimensions.ai/details/publication/pub.1044614386 |
168 | ″ | ″ | https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-10-1524-3 |
169 | ″ | rdf:type | schema:CreativeWork |
170 | sg:pub.10.1007/s10526-015-9691-2 | schema:sameAs | https://app.dimensions.ai/details/publication/pub.1035513068 |
171 | ″ | ″ | https://doi.org/10.1007/s10526-015-9691-2 |
172 | ″ | rdf:type | schema:CreativeWork |
173 | sg:pub.10.1017/s1742758400005166 | schema:sameAs | https://app.dimensions.ai/details/publication/pub.1030155948 |
174 | ″ | ″ | https://doi.org/10.1017/s1742758400005166 |
175 | ″ | rdf:type | schema:CreativeWork |
176 | grid-institutes:None | schema:alternateName | CABI - South Asia, NASC Complex, 2nd Floor, CG Block, D P Shastri Marg, Pusa, 110 012, New Delhi, India |
177 | ″ | schema:name | CABI - South Asia, NASC Complex, 2nd Floor, CG Block, D P Shastri Marg, Pusa, 110 012, New Delhi, India |
178 | ″ | rdf:type | schema:Organization |
179 | grid-institutes:grid.418543.f | schema:alternateName | CABI, Nosworthy Way, Wallingford, UK |
180 | ″ | schema:name | CABI, Nosworthy Way, Wallingford, UK |
181 | ″ | rdf:type | schema:Organization |
182 | grid-institutes:grid.473833.8 | schema:alternateName | Zoological Survey of India, Western Ghat Regional Centre, Jaferkhan Colony, Pin 673 006, Kozhikode, Kerala, India |
183 | ″ | schema:name | Entomology Department, Tocklai Tea Research Institute, Tea Research Association, Cinnamara, 785008, Jorhat, Assam, India |
184 | ″ | ″ | Zoological Survey of India, Western Ghat Regional Centre, Jaferkhan Colony, Pin 673 006, Kozhikode, Kerala, India |
185 | ″ | rdf:type | schema:Organization |
186 | grid-institutes:grid.482359.1 | schema:alternateName | Entomology Department, Tocklai Tea Research Institute, Tea Research Association, Cinnamara, 785008, Jorhat, Assam, India |
187 | ″ | schema:name | Entomology Department, Tocklai Tea Research Institute, Tea Research Association, Cinnamara, 785008, Jorhat, Assam, India |
188 | ″ | rdf:type | schema:Organization |