“…Transgenes encoding the spider knottin Hv1a (or its close otholog ω‐hexatoxin‐Ar1a) have been engineered into cotton, tobacco (alone or as a fusion to thioredoxin, onion leaf lectin, or Cry1Ac), poplar (fused to a C‐terminal fragment of CryIAb), and Arabidopsis (as a fusion to GNA or luteovirus coat protein). Transgenic plants expressing Hv1a/Ar1a are more resistant to a diverse range of insect pests, including bollworms ( Helicoverpa armigera ) and leafworms ( Spodoptera littoralis ) on cotton, peach‐potato aphids ( Myzus persicae ) on Arabidopsis , gypsy moth ( Lymantria dispar ) on poplar, and peach‐potato aphids, bollworms, leafworms, and whiteflies ( Bemisia tabaci ) on tobacco. In addition, tobacco plants engineered to express Magi‐6, a 36‐residue knottin from venom of the hexathelid spider Macrothele gigas , have greater resistance to fall armyworms ( S. frugiperda ) …”