Results 171 to 180 of about 14,764 (205)
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THE BIOLOGY OF TSETSE FLIES

Biological Reviews, 1949
Summary1. The reproductive cycle of tsetse flies occupies a minimum of 55 or 56 days at 23o, made up of 12 days' ovarian development of the first egg (always in the right ovary), 3 or 4 days' embryonic development, 7 days' larval growth in utero, and 33 days as a pupa underground; the male pupal period is longer by about 6%.
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Prospects for tsetse control

International Journal for Parasitology, 1987
Abstract To overcome the economic and medical problems caused by tsetse-borne diseases, tsetse must be controlled internationally, clearing the flies back to natural barriers against reinfestation. The prospects for this are restricted by financial, administrative and technical shortcomings, by the difficulties of surveying sparse polulations of ...
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Tsetse and Ecology

Nature, 1971
The Role of the Trypanosomiases in African Ecology: a Study of the Tsetse Fly Problem . By John Ford. Pp. xiv + 568. (Clarendon: Oxford; Oxford University: London, March 1971.) £6.50.
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Tsetse fly repellents

Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 1946
G M, FINDLAY, J, HARDWICKE, A J, PHELPS
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Cytogenetics of the tsetse fly

Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 1973
D I, Southern, T A, Cameron, P E, Pell
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Tsetse control by autosterilization

Parasitology Today, 1986
P A, Langley, M J, Hall
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Nematodes in Tsetse

Annals of Tropical Medicine & Parasitology, 1947
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Spermatophores in tsetse flies

Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 1972
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THE TSETSE FLY

The Lancet, 1933
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