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Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 2008
Human hookworm infection is the leading cause of anemia and undernutrition and the second most important parasitic infection of humans. Hookworm occurs almost exclusively in the setting of rural poverty in the developing countries of the tropics. The rural dependency reflects the precise soil and temperature requirements of the environmental life ...
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Human hookworm infection is the leading cause of anemia and undernutrition and the second most important parasitic infection of humans. Hookworm occurs almost exclusively in the setting of rural poverty in the developing countries of the tropics. The rural dependency reflects the precise soil and temperature requirements of the environmental life ...
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1979
Publisher Summary Hookworms are parasites of mammals, being most frequent in primates, carnivores, and ungulates, with a few species in other groups, including two aquatic mammals. Their natural distribution, which is determined primarily by the temperature requirements for development of their free-living stages, is equatorial, tropical, or sub ...
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Publisher Summary Hookworms are parasites of mammals, being most frequent in primates, carnivores, and ungulates, with a few species in other groups, including two aquatic mammals. Their natural distribution, which is determined primarily by the temperature requirements for development of their free-living stages, is equatorial, tropical, or sub ...
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