2020 ESA Annual Meeting (August 3 - 6)

PS 64 - Plant-Insect Interactions

Bee abundance in three managed grassland types on the WKU Green River Preserve
Emily Russ, Western Kentucky University; Albert J. Meier, Western Kentucky University
California native perennials support greater pollinator abundance and diversity than non-native, commercially available ornamentals in Southern California, despite receiving similar foraging behavior
Annika Nabors, University of California Agriculture and Natural Resources; Lea Corkidi, University of California Agriculture and Natural Resources; James Bethke, University of California Agriculture and Natural Resources
Identity of neighboring plants alters the trait expression of Solanum carolinense
Monica Paniagua Montoya, Florida State University; Jacob M. Heiling, Florida State University; Brian D. Inouye, Florida State University; Nora Underwood, Florida State University
Signaling friend and foe: Floral volatiles in Cucurbitaceae differentiate hosts in a tritrophic interaction between Blepharoneura and their parasitoid wasps
Nina Theis, Elms College; Alyssa Barnes, Elms College; Mariah Dudash, Elms College; Trevor McCarthy, Elms College; JiHyun Pak, Elms College; Erica Van Ness, Elms College; Marty A. Condon, Cornell College
Cover crop shifts invertebrate community composition in corn fields grown on dredged sediments
Michael McKean, Wright State University; Ashley Julian, Wright State University; John O. Stireman III, Wright State University; Louise M Stevenson, Bowling Green State University; Megan Rua, Wright State University
The effects of vegetation quality on insect communities in tallgrass prairies
Lydia Dean, Edgewood College; Grant Witynski, University of Madison- Wisconsin; August Brunette, University of Madison- Wisconsin; Jade Kochanski, University of Wisconsin-Madison; Stephanie L. Mcfarlane, University of Wisconsin-Madison; Ellen I. Damschen, University of Wisconsin-Madison; Claudio Gratton, University of Wisconsin - Madison
Chemistry drives pollination and herbivory in a dioecious species
Linh Nguyen, University of Wisconsin-Madison; David Alavez-Rosas, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Autonomous University of Chiapas, Tapachula; Ken Keefover-Ring, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Phloem-feeding herbivores reduce parasitism and increase palatability for chewing-herbivores on oak trees
Riley Anderson, Wesleyan University; Michael S. Singer, Wesleyan University
See more of: Contributed Posters