Publications of Dineshkumar Kandasamy
All genres
Journal Article (12)
1.
Journal Article
22, 266 (2024)
Eurasian spruce bark beetle detects lanierone using a highly expressed specialist odorant receptor, present in several functional sensillum types. BMC Biology 2.
Journal Article
238 (5), pp. 1762 - 1770 (2023)
Addressing a century-old hypothesis – do pioneer beetles of Ips typographus use volatile cues to find suitable host trees? New Phytologist 3.
Journal Article
21 (2), e3001887 (2023)
Conifer-killing bark beetles locate fungal symbionts by detecting volatile fungal metabolites of host tree resin monoterpenes. PLoS Biology 4.
Journal Article
12, 695167 (2021)
Fungal interactions and host tree preferences in the spruce bark beetle Ips typographus. Frontiers in Microbiology 5.
Journal Article
94, pp. 591 - 614 (2021)
Interactions among Norway spruce, the bark beetle Ips typographus and its fungal symbionts in times of drought. Journal of Pest Science 6.
Journal Article
225 (1), pp. 26 - 36 (2019)
Tree defence and bark beetles in a drying world: carbon partitioning, functioning and modelling. New Phytologist 7.
Journal Article
10, 208 (2019)
Flavanone-3-hydroxylase plays an important role in the biosynthesis of spruce phenolic defenses against bark beetles and their fungal associates. Frontiers in Plant Science 8.
Journal Article
34 (10), pp. 914 - 924 (2019)
Bark beetle population dynamics in the Anthropocene: Challenges and solutions. Trends in Ecology and Evolution 9.
Journal Article
13 (7), pp. 1788 - 1800 (2019)
Volatile organic compounds influence the interaction of the Eurasian spruce bark beetle (Ips typographus) with its fungal symbionts. The ISME Journal 10.
Journal Article
38, pp. 71 - 79 (2019)
Fungal associates of the tree-killing bark beetle, Ips typographus, vary in virulence, ability to degrade conifer phenolics and influence bark beetle tunneling behavior. Fungal Ecology 11.
Journal Article
42 (9), pp. 952 - 969 (2016)
Volatile organic compounds emitted by fungal associates of conifer bark beetles and their potential in bark beetle control. Journal of Chemical Ecology 12.
Journal Article
171 (2), pp. 914 - 931 (2016)
The bark-beetle-associated fungus, Endoconidiophora polonica, utilizes the phenolic defense compounds of its host as a carbon source. Plant Physiology Thesis - PhD (1)
13.
Thesis - PhD
Chemical interactions between the spruce bark beetle (Ips typographus), its host tree (Piceae abies), and its fungal associates. Dissertation, 213 pp., Friedrich-Schiller-Universität, Jena (2019)
Preprint (1)
14.
Preprint
A rationale for chemical defense mixtures in spruce oleoresin: most monoterpenes are highly toxic to either bark beetles or to their symbiotic fungi, but not both. Research Square (2024)