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Biology and Biochemistry

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74
Citations
19811
World Ranking
5596
National Ranking
2658

Research.com Recognitions

  • 1997 - Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

Overview

Ring T. Cardé is affiliated with the University of California, Riverside in the United States and has contributed extensively to research in agricultural and biological sciences as well as medicine. Their work spans numerous areas within insect science, public health, genetics, plant science, and cellular and molecular neuroscience.

The primary focus of their research includes mosquito-borne diseases and control, insect and pesticide research, insect and arachnid ecology and behavior, insect symbiosis and bacterial influences, insect pest control strategies, neurobiology and insect physiology research, and insect pheromone research and control.

Significant recent publications by Ring T. Cardé include:

  • Navigation Along Windborne Plumes of Pheromone and Resource-Linked Odors, 2020, Annual Review of Entomology
  • Attraction Versus Capture: Efficiency of BG-Sentinel Trap Under Semi-Field Conditions and Characterizing Response Behaviors for Female Aedes aegypti (Diptera: Culicidae), 2020, Journal of Medical Entomology
  • Compounds from human odor induce attraction and landing in female yellow fever mosquitoes (Aedes aegypti), 2022, Scientific Reports
  • Attraction Versus Capture II: Efficiency of the BG-Sentinel Trap Under Semifield Conditions and Characterizing Response Behaviors of Male Aedes aegypti (Diptera: Culicidae), 2020, Journal of Medical Entomology
  • In addition to cryptochrome 2, magnetic particles with olfactory co-receptor are important for magnetic orientation in termites, 2021, Communications Biology

Frequent coauthors associated with Cardé's research include Brogan A. Amos, Jan E. Bello, Benjamin D. Sumner, Scott A. Ritchie, and Gabriel P. Hughes.

Common publication venues for their work include:

  • Journal of Medical Entomology
  • Journal of Insect Behavior
  • Journal of Vector Ecology
  • Annual Review of Entomology
  • Scientific Reports

Cardé's areas of expertise reflect a concentration on the biology and control of insect vectors, with a particular emphasis on mosquito behavior and ecology, and the application of these studies to public health challenges involving vector-borne diseases.

In 1997, Ring T. Cardé was recognized as a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), highlighting their involvement in advancing scientific knowledge within their fields of study.

Best Publications

  • Chemical Ecology of Insects

    William J. Bell;Ring T. Cardé

  • Odor plumes and how insects use them

    John Murtis;Joseph S. Elkinton;Ring T. Carde

  • CONTROL OF MOTH PESTS BY MATING DISRUPTION: Successes and Constraints

    Ring T. Cardé;Albert K. Minks

  • Encyclopedia of insects.

    Vincent H. Resh;Ring T. Cardé

  • Navigational Strategies Used by Insects to Find Distant, Wind-Borne Sources of Odor

    Ring T. Cardé;Mark A. Willis

  • Parasitoid foraging and learning.

    L.E.M. Vet;W.J. Lewis;R.T. Cardé

  • Fine-scale structure of pheromone plumes modulates upwind orientation of flying moths

    Agenor Mafra-Neto;Agenor Mafra-Neto;Ring T. Cardé

  • Filament-based atmospheric dispersion model to achieve short time-scale structure of odor plumes

    Jay A. Farrell;John Murlis;Xuezhu Long;Wei Li

  • Responses of Lepidoptera to Synthetic Sex Pheromone Chemicals and Their Analogues

    and W L Roelofs;R T Carde

  • Carbon dioxide instantly sensitizes female yellow fever mosquitoes to human skin odours.

    Teun Dekker;Martin Geier;Ring T. Cardé

  • Spatial and temporal structures of pheromone plumes in fields and forests

    John Murlis;Mark A. Willis;Ring T. Cardé

  • Advances in insect chemical ecology

    Ring T. Cardé;Jocelyn G. Millar

  • Sex pheromone of the european corn borer,Ostrinia nubilalis (Lepidoptera: Pyralidae), in New York

    J. Kochansky;R. T. Cardé;J. Liebherr;W. L. Roelofs

  • Analysis of Pheromone-Mediated Behaviors in Male Grapholitha molesta, the Oriental Fruit Moth (Lepidoptera: Tortricidae)

    Thomas C. Baker;Ring T. Cardé

  • Ultra-prolonged activation of CO2-sensing neurons disorients mosquitoes

    Stephanie Lynn Turner;Nan Li;Tom Guda;John Githure

  • L-lactic acid: a human-signifying host cue for the anthropophilic mosquito Anopheles gambiae.

    T. Dekker;B. Steib;R. T. Cardé;M. Geier

  • Behavioral Responses of the Gypsy Moth in a Wind Tunnel to Air-Borne Enantiomers of Disparlure

    R. T. Cardé;T. E. Hagaman

  • IDENTIFICATION OF A FOUR-COMPONENT SEX PHEROMONE OF THE FEMALE ORIENTAL FRUIT MOTH, Grapholitha molesta (LEPIDOPTERA: TORTRICIDAE)

    A. M. Cardé;Thomas Charles Baker;R. T. Cardé

  • Endogenous and exogenous factors affecting periodicities of female calling and male sex pheromone response in Grapholitha molesta (Busck)

    Thomas Charles Baker;Ring T. Cardé

  • Pheromone puff trajectory and upwind flight of male gypsy moths in a forest

    J. S. Elkinton;C. Schal;T. Onot;R. T. Cardé

Frequent Co-Authors

Wendell L. Roelofs
Wendell L. Roelofs Cornell University
Thomas C. Baker
Thomas C. Baker Pennsylvania State University
Jocelyn G. Millar
Jocelyn G. Millar University of California, Riverside
Coby Schal
Coby Schal North Carolina State University
Vincent H. Resh
Vincent H. Resh University of California, Berkeley
Joseph S. Elkinton
Joseph S. Elkinton University of Massachusetts Amherst
Jay A. Farrell
Jay A. Farrell University of California, Riverside
Scott A. Ritchie
Scott A. Ritchie James Cook University
Louise E. M. Vet
Louise E. M. Vet Wageningen University & Research
Bradley A. Mullens
Bradley A. Mullens University of California, Riverside

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