Results 101 to 110 of about 350 (124)
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Feeding Electrograms of Hyalomma Aegyptium Ticks at Different Temperatures1
Journal of Medical Entomology, 1970Gordon K Sweatman
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Temperature Control Of Engorgement By Subadult Hyalomma Aegyptium Ticks1
Journal of Medical Entomology, 1970Gordon K Sweatman
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[Towards a diagnostic view of Hyalomma (Hyalomma) aegyptium (Acari, Ixodidae)].
Parazitologiia, 2003The diagnostic characters of larval, nymphal and adult Hyalomma aegyptium (L., 1758) based on specimens from the territory of most part of the area are given. In the diagnoses of immature stages, was used the characters, which were formerly tested by the author for diagnostics of other Hyalomma species occurring in the former USSR.
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A novel, fast-growing Borrelia sp. isolated from the hard tick Hyalomma aegyptium in Turkey
Microbiology, 2003A novel, fast-growing spirochaete was isolated from the hard tick Hyalomma aegyptium (family Ixodidae, subfamily Metastriata) using Barbour–Stoenner–Kelly (BSK) II medium. Tick samples were taken during the summer of 2000 from the Istanbul area in northwestern Turkey.
Ece S, Güner +4 more
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Hereditary transmission of Theileria annulata infection in the tick, Hyalomma aegyptium neum
Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 19501. 1. Hyalomma aegyptium is the intermediate host of Theileria annulata in India. 2. 2. Progeny of the infected Hyalomma aegyptium in their adult stage only are capable of transmitting Theileria annulata to susceptible bovines. 3. 3. Positive results were obtained up to third generation adults in the first series of observations (1940–1942)
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A first record of the tortoise tick, Hyalomma aegyptium (Linnaeus 1758) on Malta
International Journal of Acarology, 2017ABSTRACTTortoises of the genus Testudo are commonly kept pets on the Maltese Islands. This is a first record of the presence of Hyalomma aegyptium (Linnaeus 1758), also known as the “tortoise tick,” on Malta. Two male H. aegyptium were collected from an adult Mediterranean spur-thighed tortoise (Testudo graeca Linnaeus 1758) and a further two male H ...
Luke Sultana Loporto +3 more
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The dependence of Hyalomma aegyptium on its tortoise host Testudo graeca in Algeria.
Medical and veterinary entomology, 2017Hyalomma aegyptium (Linnaeus, 1758) (Ixodida: Ixodidae) has recently been confirmed as a carrier of numerous pathogenic, including zoonotic, agents. Four environmentally distinct regions of Algeria, located between the humid coastal zone and the arid Saharan Atlas range, were selected in order to compare differences in tick abundance among localities ...
G, Tiar +4 more
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The Journal of Parasitology, 1985
Field observations were made on the relationship between sex and density and the attachment sites of Hyalomma aegyptium to its major host, the tortoise Testudo gracea. The usual sites of attachment were around the back legs and tail of the host. For undamaged hosts there was a positive correlation between tick density and the numbers of each sex ...
Trevor N. Petney, Fadwa Al-Yaman
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Field observations were made on the relationship between sex and density and the attachment sites of Hyalomma aegyptium to its major host, the tortoise Testudo gracea. The usual sites of attachment were around the back legs and tail of the host. For undamaged hosts there was a positive correlation between tick density and the numbers of each sex ...
Trevor N. Petney, Fadwa Al-Yaman
openaire +1 more source

