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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
271

Comparaison de la réponse anticorps systémique des ovins Barbados black belly et INRA 401 lors d'infestations expérimentales par Haemonchus contortus (Nematoda : Trichostrongylidae)

Pénicaud, Juliette Jacquiet, Philippe. January 2007 (has links) (PDF)
Reproduction de : Thèse d'exercice : Médecine vétérinaire : Toulouse 3 : 2007. / Titre provenant de l'écran titre. Bibliogr. p. 81-96.
272

Spirorchis parrus (Stunkard) its life history and the development of its excretory system (Trematoda: Spirorchiidae)

Wall, Limas Dunlap, January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Michigan, 1940. / Cover title. "Contribution from the Department of zoology, University of Michigan." "Reprinted from Transactions of the American microscopical society, vol. LX, no. 2, April, 1941." Bibliography: p. 258-260.
273

Studies on the biology of some parasites of the three-spined stickleback, Gasterosteus aculeatus L. with special reference to myxosporea

Sultana, Qausar January 1994 (has links)
A population of three-spined stickleback, Gasterosteus aculeatus L., was sampled every two weeks for 14 months from Airthrey Loch on the campus of the University of Stirling. A total of 857 fish were collected and three species of parasites were studied. The monogenean Gyrodactylus gasterostei was found on the skin and fins and two myxosporean parasites, Sphaerospora elegans and Myxobilatus gasterostei, were present in the kidney. All parasite species were present throughout the year but abundance was correlated with the yearly life cycle of the host fish. Lower prevalence and intensity were observed in summer due to the large number of young fish in the samples. The comparative ultrastructure and development of the two myxosporeans was studied by light and transmission and scanning electron microscopy. Both myxosporeans followed the general pattern of myxosporean development but showed some novel features. Sphaerospora e/egans had two distinct developmental cycles. A proliferative cycle involving extrasporogonic stages occurred in the blood whereas spore production occurred in the kidney. Light microscopy of Giemsa stained blood smears suggested proliferation of extra-sporogonic stages by external budding or plasmotomy. Structural similarities between extra-sporogonic blood stages and sporogonic kidney stages are discussed. Although S. elegans mostly formed disporous plasmodia, monosporous plasmodia were also occasionally observed. Before the appearance of sporogonic cells within the early pseudoplasmodia, certain areas of pseudoplasmodial cytoplasm became electron lucent, eventually acquired cell organeUes and later appeared as sporogonic cells. Developing valvogenic cells contained protuberances at the posterolateral side of spores which disappeared in mature spores. Characteristic lipid bodies were seen in developing capsulogenic cells and developing uninucleated sporoplasmic cells contained abundant glycogen granules. The sporoplasmic cells were devoid of sporoplasmosomes. Plasmodia of M. gasterostei were mono, di or polysporous and showed features of both coelozoic and histozoic myxosporeans, including a unit surface membrane, simple pinocytosis aanand presence of a number of vegetative nuclei and generative cells, the latter which formed pansporoblasts before the initiation of sporogenesis. A membrane bound tubular structure and some electron dense fibrillar bundles are previously undiscovered cytoplasmic organelles of the plasmodia. Developing capsulogenic cells contained characteristic membrane bound vacuoles filled with electron dense (glycogen) material. Myxobilatus gasterostel attached to the epithelial cells by plasmodial surface projections and there were electron dense areas at the point of attachment. Sphaerospora elegans showed occasional hairlike processes projecting from the pseudoplasmodial surface to the microvillous brush border of the epithelial cells. There were no electron dense areas at the point of attachment to the epithelial cells of the kidney tubules. Early undifferentiated pre-sporogonic stages of both parasites were occasionally present intracellularly in the tubular epithelium suggesting this is a route of entry into the tubular lumen. Early stages of S. elegans were also seen in the capillary lumen of the glomerulus. Intracellular and intraluminal stages of S. elegans and M. gasterostel caused pathological changes in different ways. Histopathological changes associated with S. elegans included vacuolation and accumulation of electron dense material in the epithelium whereas M. gasterostei caused large vacuolation with necrosis of the epithelial layer. Both parasites caused destruction of glomerular tufts in heavy infections and an increased number of rodlet cells in the epithelial layer were common in both cases. The two myxosporean species were most abundant during the winter and spring. Extra-sporogonic stages of S. elegans were found only in January and June in the rete-mirabile of the eye, circulating blood and kidney. In infections with S. elegans sex of the host fish was apparently of no significance, whereas significantly lower infestations occurred in male sticklebacks infected with M. gasterostei compared with females. Host size was important in determining the prevalence and intensity of both myxosporean species. Older fish were less heavily infected, possibly due to an acquired immunity or pathogenic effects on the host. A high number of mixed infections indicated that there was no interspeciflc competition between the two parasites. There appeared to be a continuous recruitment of myxosporeans throughout the year. Studies on myxosporean spore shedding suggested that spore production and shedding was continuous throughout the year and was uninfluenced by temperature or season. Gyrodactylus gasterostel was generally more abundant in winter and spring than in summer and autumn, reflecting the greater numbers of small young of the year fish at these times. The age of the host fish was a significant factor influencing the prevalence and intensity of infestation with G. gasterostei. Sex of the host had no apparent influence on infestation. The parasite was highly overdispersed within the host population and its distribution was best fitted by the negative binomial.
274

MACROPARASITES IN THREE SPECIES OF DESERT LAGOMORPHS (ARIZONA)

Lipson, Milton Peter January 1985 (has links)
No description available.
275

Morphological and ecological investigations of Longidorus elongatus (De Man, 1876) Thorne and Swanger, 1936 in Arizona

Husain, Khalid Saifuddin, 1933- January 1965 (has links)
No description available.
276

Effects of Taenia saginata cysticercosis on myocardial and other tissues of bovine

White, Larry Timothy, 1949- January 1974 (has links)
No description available.
277

Appreciating the Importance of Parasites: Analyzing and Understanding the Ecology of Parasite-Host Interactions

O'Brien, Chris January 2008 (has links)
There is a growing interest in the nature of parasite-host interactions, the role these relationships play in ecological communities, and how human activities alter these associations. Furthermore, because inference about these interactions is usually gained by methods of statistical hypothesis testing, additional importance should be placed on the analysis and interpretation of parasite-host interactions. In this dissertation I address these ideas in three separate but interrelated studies with the three following questions: 1) How do two parasites with complex life-cycles alter the behavior of a novel amphipod host, and how do host and non-host predators respond to infected amphipod prey? In contrast to other studies, I found that two parasites of an endemic amphipod at Montezuma Well had little affect on their amphipod host, and that these associations had little affect on predation rates by both host and non-host predators. Results from this study underscore the importance of further investigating novel parasite-host interactions and placing them in their phylogenetic and evolutionary context. 2) Does human recreation affect spatial patterns of infection in an otherwise natural ecosystem? This study demonstrates that human visitors to Montezuma Castle National Monument alter patterns of waterfowl space use that in turn affect spatial patterns of disease in invertebrate hosts. This is the first study to document such an effect, and I discuss the important implications of this finding. 3) How is hypothesis testing applied in studies of wildlife disease, what conclusions can we make about the relative usefulness of these methodologies, and how can the analysis and interpretation of wildlife disease studies be improved? In this final study I conducted a literature review, computed statistical power for methodologies used in the literature, and re-analyzed published data to provide an example of the advantages of my suggested approach. I conclude that many studies report findings using methods that could be more informative and some studies may lack statistical power, demonstrating the importance of using prospective power analysis in the design of future studies. Furthermore, using statistical techniques that estimate the observed effect size can aid in increasing information transfer in studies of wildlife disease.
278

Plagiorchis noblei and blackfly larvae : factors affecting parasite acquisition and the effect of infection on host survival

Jacobs, Philippe, 1961- January 1991 (has links)
Cercariae of the digenean Plagiorchis noblei penetrate and kill a variety of aquatic larval dipterans. The present study determined whether these parasites can infect blackfly larvae, and established what biotic and abiotic factors affect parasite acquisition and the survival of infected hosts in the laboratory. Four species of blackfly larvae, Prosimulium mixtum, Simulium vittatum, S. decorum, and Stegopterna mutata, were exposed to cercariae in flowing water. Prevalence and intensity of infection of all species varied directly with exposure intensity and decreased with increasing water velocity, prevalence increased with larval size. Infection levels were higher for P. mixtum. The production of silk strands by the blackfly larvae and their persistence at low water velocities may facilitate parasite acquisition. Mortality among infected larvae of all species was three times that of controls. The data suggest that exposure to P. noblei cercariae adversely affected the survival of blackfly larvae.
279

Behavioural changes in Trichinella spiralis-infected mice

Zohar, Alexandra Simona. January 1986 (has links)
No description available.
280

Studies on the parasitism of Aphelenchus avenae Bastian, 1865.

Terry, E. R. January 1966 (has links)
Corn is one of the three most valuable cereals in the world, and at present its adoption as a grain crop in Quebec is being encouraged. [...]

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