Journal of the Department of Agriculture, Journal of the Department of Agriculture, Western Australia, Series 4 Western Australia, Series 4
Volume 22
Number 2 1981 Article 1
1-1-1981
Contents Contents
Department of Agriculture, Western Australia
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Recommended Citation Recommended Citation
Department of Agriculture, Western Australia (1981) "Contents," Journal of the Department of Agriculture, Western Australia, Series 4: Vol. 22: No. 2, Article 1.
Available at: https://library.dpird.wa.gov.au/journal_agriculture4/vol22/iss2/1
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Contents
Journal of Agriculture—Western Australia
Volume 22, No. 2 (4th series), 1981. ISSN 0021-8618 The 'BUG WAR'—a review of biological pest control
43 Foreword
44 There's nothing new in biological control 45 The weed war . . . and the biological weapon 47 Could genetic manipulation beat the blowfly?
50 Citrus red scale, from sprays to parasites
51 Fruit fly under attack . . . from the sterile insect technique 53 Disease could control grasshoppers
55 Managing pests in apple orchards 56 Trichopoda . . . a tricky parasite 58 Can insects solve dock problems?
59 Exotic parasite helps control Ord armyworms 60 The heart of the matter . . . the quarantine insectary 61 Native wasps hit introduced tree pest
63 Controlling cotton pests with egg parasites 65 Exotic lucerne aphids
68 Parasite 'hitchhikers' hit Ord rice pest 70 Perapion and the doublegee
72 Tackling the lucerne flea and red-legged earth mite 75 Biological success against woolly aphis
76 Controlling cattle dung and the bush fly
78 The jarrah leaf miner . . . and its natural enemies 81 Integrating insect control for Ord soybean production 83 Glossary of pests and parasites
l.
• The fruit fly. a well-known pest, now the target of a biological eradication campaign 2.
• The robber fly, an active, forest-dwelling predator of flies and other insects
3.
• Helioihis, the cotton bollworm, an Ord pest now controlled biologically
Issued by direction of the Minister for Agriculture, and published four times a year by the Department of Agriculture, Western Australia.
Editor—J. A. Lawson; Design—L. Webb; Photography—E. Laidlaw, G.
Peters.
Articles which appear in this Journal may be freely reprinted, provided that the Department and the author(s) are acknowledged.
Cover: The predatory fly Trichopoda parasitises the green vegetable bug.
Photographer Ernie Laidlaw used this colourful fly and its victim as the basis for our cover.
Journal of Agriculture Vol 22 No 2, 1981