Source: Journal of Chemical Ecology. Unidade: ESALQ
Subjects: ATRATIVOS QUÍMICOS, CANA-DE-AÇÚCAR, COMPOSTOS VOLÁTEIS, FUNGOS ENDOFÍTICOS, INSETOS PREDADORES, LAGARTAS, OLFATO
ABNT
HERNÁNDEZ, Marvin Mateo Pec et al. When ‘calls for help’ backfire: induced plant volatiles reduce the attraction of a nocturnal predator in sugarcane. Journal of Chemical Ecology, v. 52, p. 1-12, 2026Tradução . . Disponível em: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10886-025-01682-3. Acesso em: 09 fev. 2026.APA
Hernández, M. M. P., Salazar-Mendoza, P. S., Azevedo, K. E. X. de, Magalhães, D. M., Delalibera Jr., I., & Bento, J. M. S. (2026). When ‘calls for help’ backfire: induced plant volatiles reduce the attraction of a nocturnal predator in sugarcane. Journal of Chemical Ecology, 52, 1-12. doi:10.1007/s10886-025-01682-3NLM
Hernández MMP, Salazar-Mendoza PS, Azevedo KEX de, Magalhães DM, Delalibera Jr. I, Bento JMS. When ‘calls for help’ backfire: induced plant volatiles reduce the attraction of a nocturnal predator in sugarcane [Internet]. Journal of Chemical Ecology. 2026 ; 52 1-12.[citado 2026 fev. 09 ] Available from: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10886-025-01682-3Vancouver
Hernández MMP, Salazar-Mendoza PS, Azevedo KEX de, Magalhães DM, Delalibera Jr. I, Bento JMS. When ‘calls for help’ backfire: induced plant volatiles reduce the attraction of a nocturnal predator in sugarcane [Internet]. Journal of Chemical Ecology. 2026 ; 52 1-12.[citado 2026 fev. 09 ] Available from: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10886-025-01682-3
