Bugs, snails and horses: expanding the knowledge of infection vectors with new and old technologies.
Abstract: No abstract available
Publication Date: 2000-08-22 PubMed ID: 10952373DOI: 10.2746/042516400777032183Google Scholar: Lookup
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Cite This Article
APA
Dumler JS.
(2000).
Bugs, snails and horses: expanding the knowledge of infection vectors with new and old technologies.
Equine Vet J, 32(4), 273-274.
https://doi.org/10.2746/042516400777032183 Publication
Researcher Affiliations
MeSH Terms
- Animals
- Disease Vectors
- Dog Diseases / etiology
- Dog Diseases / microbiology
- Dogs
- Ehrlichia / classification
- Ehrlichiosis / transmission
- Ehrlichiosis / veterinary
- Fishes / microbiology
- Horse Diseases / etiology
- Horse Diseases / microbiology
- Horses
- Humans
- Insect Vectors
- Rickettsiaceae
- Rickettsiaceae Infections / veterinary
- Snails / microbiology
- Ticks / microbiology
Citations
This article has been cited 1 times.- Greiman SE, Tkach VV, Vaughan JA. Transmission rates of the bacterial endosymbiont, Neorickettsia risticii, during the asexual reproduction phase of its digenean host, Plagiorchis elegans, within naturally infected lymnaeid snails.. Parasit Vectors 2013 Oct 22;6:303.
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