Dr. Kacie Athey (she/her) contributes to understanding non-chemical insect control within specialty crops systems. Her studies combine field research with molecular gut content analysis to study practical insect control applications and arthropod food webs.

More information:
Athey is a researcher passionate about caring for specialty crops by applying non-chemical insect control. By studying molecular gut content and DNA in insects, Athey has been able to further data that indicates potential predators of herbivorous prey. Many of her other studies include the development of land cover to encourage predation of insects that damage specialty crops, integrated pest management for stink bugs, and the promising results of nonconsumptive pathways. Before joining the faculty at the University of Illinois, Athey attended the University of Nebraska at Omaha and became an undergraduate researcher, then moved on to be a senior lab technician for the Invertebrate Ecology Lab and graduate research assistant at the University of Kentucky, where she obtained her M.S. and Ph.D. She was also nominated for the University of Kentucky's Outstanding Staff Award and was the second-prize winner of the Doctor of Philosophy competition at the Ohio Valley Entomological Association.

Affiliations:
Dr. Athey is an assistant professor in the Department of Crop Sciences in the College of Agricultural, Consumer Environmental Sciences (ACES) at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. She is also the principal investigator of Specialty Crops Entomology and a Faculty Extension Specialist with Illinois Extension.



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Cited By

Year

Natural Enemies and Biological Control of Stink Bugs (Hemiptera: Heteroptera) in North America

1

2022

News & Announcements

2022

Effect of Breathable Row Covers and Ground Cover on Pest Insect Levels and Cucurbit Yield

1

2022

Hidden host mortality from an introduced parasitoid: Conventional and molecular evaluation of non-target risk

13

2020

Ants increase cloverworm herbivory via nonconsumptive pathways

1

2020

Endosymbiotic bacteria are prevalent and diverse in agricultural spiders

22

2020

Everything old is new again: Codling moth SIR in Washington State

2019

Lessons from next generation sequencing techniques for gut content analysis in organic cucurbit production

2019

Predation on stink bugs (Hemiptera: Pentatomidae) in cotton and soybean agroecosystems

10

2019

Sublethal effects of insecticides on bed bug behavior

2018

Pitfalls and lessons from next generation sequencing techniques for molecular gut content analysis

2018

Molecular gut content analysis of different spider body parts

60

2018

MS Student Ten-Minute Paper Competition (P-IE Session I)

2018

Multi-scale land use effects on ant predation in agroecosystems

2017

Laboratory and field investigation of biological control for brown marmorated stink bug (Halyomorpha halys (Stål)(Hemiptera: Pentatomidae))

9

2017

A tale of two fluids: does storing specimens together in liquid preservative cause DNA cross‐contamination in molecular gut‐content studies?

6

2017

Land cover diversity increases predator aggregation and consumption of prey

13

2017

New PCR primers enhance investigation of host‐parasitoid food webs

4

2017

Exploring Predator-Prey Interactions in Agroecosystems through Molecular Gut-Content Analysis

2017

Spring forward: molecular detection of early season predation in agroecosystems

36

2016

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