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[Tsetse flies and trypanosomiasis].
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Tsetse flies are attracted to the invasive plant Lantana camara
In tsetse both sexes feed exclusively on the blood of vertebrates for a few minutes every 2-3 days. Tsetse flies seek cover from high temperatures to conserve energy and plants provide shelter for tsetse in all the biotopes they occupy.
P M Guerin
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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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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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The flight performance of tsetse flies
Journal of Insect Physiology, 1975Abstract The four species of tsetse used are shown to be aerodynamically rather similar. The wingbeat frequency, aerodynamic lift, flight duration, and number of wingbeats per flight are seen to undergo large increases during adult maturation. Tsetse can produce unusually large aerodynamic lifts, although the flight performance declines very quickly ...
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1993
Tsetse flies belong to the genus Glossina, which are a unique group of insects in terms of appearance, life cycle, distribution and medical importance. There are some 23 species of tsetse, found only on the continent of Africa, south of the Sahara desert.
N. R. H. Burgess, G. O. Cowan
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Tsetse flies belong to the genus Glossina, which are a unique group of insects in terms of appearance, life cycle, distribution and medical importance. There are some 23 species of tsetse, found only on the continent of Africa, south of the Sahara desert.
N. R. H. Burgess, G. O. Cowan
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1993
The Glossinidae, or tsetse-flies, form a monogeneric family of the Diptera. The adults range in length from 6 to 14 mm and in all the 23 known species are various shades of brown — ranging from light yellowish brown to dark blackish brown. In some species the abdomen has alternate darker and lighter bands. Female flies give birth, at intervals of about
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The Glossinidae, or tsetse-flies, form a monogeneric family of the Diptera. The adults range in length from 6 to 14 mm and in all the 23 known species are various shades of brown — ranging from light yellowish brown to dark blackish brown. In some species the abdomen has alternate darker and lighter bands. Female flies give birth, at intervals of about
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