Results 171 to 180 of about 1,567 (190)
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Estimation of the interval between feeding and capture in peridomestic Glossina tachinoides
Medical and Veterinary Entomology, 1989ABSTRACT. From successive 24‐hourly dissections of non‐teneral field‐caught Glossina tachinoides Westwood which had fed on a guinea‐pig in the laboratory, the progressive movement of a bloodmeal through the midgut was monitored and five stages (categories) in the trophic ...
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Natural hosts of Glossina tachinoides (Diptera: Glossinidae) in northern Côte d'Ivoire.
Tropical medicine and parasitology : official organ of Deutsche Tropenmedizinische Gesellschaft and of Deutsche Gesellschaft fur Technische Zusammenarbeit (GTZ), 1990Bloodmeal samples of G. tachinoides were taken at the Comoé National Parc in northern Côte d'Ivoire. The total of 1154 identified samples consisted mainly of ruminants (37%, whereof bushbuck represented 57%), hippopotamus (34%), and monitor lizard (19%). These proportions changed with the seasons. In the rainy season the portion of hippopotamus samples
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Reproductive status of a wild population of Glossina tachinoides Westwood (Diptera: Glossinidae)
Nigerian Journal of Entomology, 1985Data on the reproductive capacity of a wild population of female Glossina could indicate whether a population is under stress or is likely to collapse. Such data are of primary importance in a tsetse control programme involving the use of the Sterile Insect Technique.
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Acta Tropica, 1997
As strictly haematophagous insects, tsetse flies feed on a wide variety of wild and domestic animals. Although these are mainly mammals, some tsetse species also feed on reptiles. The present study investigated whether the odours of several potential natural tsetse hosts may be used as novel attractants to improve the catch of Glossina tachinoides or G.
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As strictly haematophagous insects, tsetse flies feed on a wide variety of wild and domestic animals. Although these are mainly mammals, some tsetse species also feed on reptiles. The present study investigated whether the odours of several potential natural tsetse hosts may be used as novel attractants to improve the catch of Glossina tachinoides or G.
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The external genitalia of Glossina tachinoides Westwood
Transactions of the Royal Entomological Society of London, 1975openaire +1 more source
Verhalten der Tsetsefliegen-Art Glossina tachinoides an Fallen (Diptera: Glossinidae)
Entomologia Generalis, 1995openaire +1 more source
Factors affecting Blood Clotting from Salivary Glands and Crop of Glossina austeni
Nature, 1966exaly

