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Riding the Trojan horse: Combating pest insects with their own symbionts
Edouard Jurkevitch
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Corresponding author for this work
Department of Plant Pathology and Microbiology
Research output
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Contribution to journal
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Short survey
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peer-review
35
Scopus citations
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Keyphrases
Mediterranean Fruit Fly
100%
Symbiont
100%
Pest Insects
100%
Microbiota
66%
Large Group
33%
Strong Reduction
33%
Ceratitis Capitata
33%
Inoculation
33%
Community Structure
33%
Functional Analysis
33%
Tephritidae
33%
Large Families
33%
Essential Function
33%
Microbes
33%
Sterile Insect Technique
33%
Bactrocera Oleae
33%
Sterile Male
33%
Olive Fly
33%
Fitness Parameters
33%
Microbiota Community
33%
Host Fitness
33%
Klebsiella
33%
Non-sterile
33%
Affected Females
33%
Female Mating Preference
33%
Obligate Symbiont
33%
Community Analysis
33%
Fruit Pest
33%
Pest Organism
33%
Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Ceratitis capitata
100%
Insect Pests
100%
Symbiont
100%
Olive Fruit Fly
50%
Tephritidae
25%
Mating Behavior
25%
Sterile Insect Technique
25%
Animal Pest
25%
Klebsiella
25%
Grand Unified Theory
25%
Immunology and Microbiology
Microflora
100%
Symbiont
100%
Mediterranean Fruit Fly
66%
Bactrocera oleae
66%
Tephritidae
33%
Klebsiella
33%