نتایج جستجو برای: ectoparasites

تعداد نتایج: 1371  

2013
Jesse E. H. Patterson Peter Neuhaus Susan J. Kutz Kathreen E. Ruckstuhl

In order to evaluate potential reproductive costs associated with parasitism, we experimentally removed ectoparasites from reproductive female North American red squirrels (Tamiasciurus hudsonicus). Body mass and overwinter survival of mothers, days to juvenile emergence, juvenile survival from birth to emergence, and body mass of juveniles at emergence were all compared to those of untreated (...

Journal: :Journal of wildlife diseases 2008
Arian D Wallach Uri Shanas Kosta Y Mumcuoglu Moshe Inbar

The ectoparasite fauna of reintroduced roe deer (Capreolus capreolus) was surveyed in a Mediterranean forest in Israel. Ectoparasites were collected from four female hand-reared deer during 2004 and 2005. Seasonality, predilection sites of infestation, and the apparent effect of the parasites are presented. This is the first study of roe deer parasites in the East Mediterranean. The ectoparasit...

Journal: :Biology letters 2007
Frédéric Bordes Daniel T Blumstein Serge Morand

The risk of parasitism is considered to be a general cost of sociality and individuals living in larger groups are typically considered to be more likely to be infected with parasites. However, contradictory results have been reported for the relationship between group size and infection by directly transmitted parasites. We used independent contrasts to examine the relationship between an inde...

Journal: :Proceedings. Biological sciences 2003
Pierre Bize Alexandre Roulin Heinz Richner

Adoption occurs frequently in colonial species where both the cost of parasitism and the opportunity for dependent young to find a foster family are typically high. Because ectoparasites show highly aggregated distributions among colony members, we tested two central predictions of the novel hypothesis that adoption is driven by selection on young to reduce ectoparasite load: first, that nest-b...

2011
Carol Fassbinder-Orth

Birds serve as reservoirs for at least 10 arthropod borne viruses of wildlife and human concern (e.g. West Nile virus, Western Equine Encephalitis) and greater knowledge of the immune system dynamics of avian hosts and their disease vectors will have obvious economic benefits to agricultural, wildlife and human health interests. The more we begin to understand the host-vectorpathogen interactio...

Journal: :The Open Ornithology Journal 2010

Journal: :Revue scientifique et technique 1994
J R Allen

Examples of immunological reactions to arthropod parasites include responses by hosts to the following stimuli: excretory and secretory antigens produced by myiasis-producing larvae or skin-dwelling (mange) mites salivary antigens of blood-sucking arthropods. In many cases, these are hypersensitivity reactions, which often appear not to produce very deleterious effects on the parasites. However...

Journal: :Revue scientifique et technique 1994
R A Bram

Integrated control of ectoparasites of veterinary importance is being implemented on a limited basis at present. However, several forces are accelerating a global shift to integrated pest management (IPM). These accelerating forces include the following: reduction in new chemical compounds registered for use on livestock and poultry universal development of resistance to pesticides heightened e...

2016
Ana Sofia Guerra Ralph P. Eckerlin Ashley P. G. Dowling Lance A. Durden Richard G. Robbins Katharina Dittmar Kristofer M. Helgen Bernard Agwanda Brian F. Allan Tyler Hedlund Hillary S. Young

Despite the established importance of rodents as reservoirs of vector-borne zoonoses in East Africa, there is relatively limited information regarding the infestation parameters and host associations of ectoparasites that vector many such pathogens among small mammals in this region. Between 2009 and 2013, small mammals were livetrapped in the semiarid savanna of Kenya. A subset of these indivi...

Journal: :The Journal of parasitology 2012
Sarah E Bush Scott M Villa Than J Boves Dallas Brewer James R Belthoff

Preening is the principle behavioral defense used by birds to combat ectoparasites. Most birds have a small overhang at the tip of their bills that is used to shear through the tough cuticle of ectoparasitic arthropods, making preening much more efficient. Birds may also scratch with their feet to defend against ectoparasites. This is particularly important for removing ectoparasites on the hea...

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