نتایج جستجو برای: fly larva

تعداد نتایج: 39095  

Journal: :journal of arthropod-borne diseases 0
s azari-hamidian school of public health, guilan university of medical sciences, rasht, iran.

an investigation was carried out during april to december 2000 to study mosquito fauna and ecology in guilan prov ince of northern iran. the mosquito larvae were collected by dipping method and larval habitat characteristics recorded ac cording to hydro-ecological features. in total, 3937 larvae of the genus culex from 92 larval breeding sites were collected. six spe cies of the genus culex; cx...

2017
Nena Pavlidi Anastasia Gioti Nicky Wybouw Wannes Dermauw Michael Ben-Yosef Boaz Yuval Edouard Jurkevich Anastasia Kampouraki Thomas Van Leeuwen John Vontas

The olive fruit fly, Bactrocera oleae, is the most destructive pest of olive orchards worldwide. The monophagous larva has the unique capability of feeding on olive mesocarp, coping with high levels of phenolic compounds and utilizing non-hydrolyzed proteins present, particularly in the unripe, green olives. On the molecular level, the interaction between B. oleae and olives has not been invest...

Journal: :The Journal of Cell Biology 2003
Nicole LeBrasseur

Hox signals death for neuronal precursors he number of neurons in an adult fly is determined by a death-inducing blast of a homeodomain protein, based on results from When the fly larva hatches, neurons are nearly evenly distributed along the major body axis. But in the adult, they are more numerous in the segments of the thorax than the abdomen, in part because neural stem cells (NSCs) in the ...

Journal: :acta medica iranica 0
shohre alimohamadi department of obstetrics and gynecology, school of medicine, hamadanuniversity of medical sciences, hamadan, iran. arash dehghan department of pathology, school of medicine, hamadanuniversity of medical sciences, hamadan, iran. nosrat neghab department of obstetrics and gynecology, school of medicine, hamadanuniversity of medical sciences, hamadan, iran.

hydatid disease, caused by echinococcusgranulosus, is a common parasitic infection of the liver. disseminated intra-abdominal hydatid disease may occur with the rupture of the hydatid cyst into the peritoneal cavity, producing secondary echinococcosis. but primary hydatid cyst in the pelvis is rare. we report a case of bilateral hydatid cyst of the pelvis in a 53years old woman presented with a...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2007
Joseph P Rinehart Aiqing Li George D Yocum Rebecca M Robich Scott A L Hayward David L Denlinger

Diapause, the dormancy common to overwintering insects, evokes a unique pattern of gene expression. In the flesh fly, most, but not all, of the fly's heat shock proteins (Hsps) are up-regulated. The diapause up-regulated Hsps include two members of the Hsp70 family, one member of the Hsp60 family (TCP-1), at least four members of the small Hsp family, and a small Hsp pseudogene. Expression of a...

Journal: :international journal of environmental research 2013
m.h. al-malack a.a. bukhari o.s. al-amoudi h.h. al-muhanna t.h. zaidi

plants firing fuel oil produce huge quantities of fly ash as solid waste, which needs to becharacterized prior to its proper management. it is worth mentioning that the published literature lackcomprehensive information on the characteristics of such fly ash. characteristics of fuel oil fly ash producedat selected power (pp) and water desalination (dp) plants were determined. the results showed...

Journal: :BMC Surgery 2004
Charles Adeyinka Adisa Augustus Mbanaso

BACKGROUND Cutaneous myiasis of the breast due to infestation by the larva of Cordylobia anthropophaga is rare. To the best of our knowledge, only one case has been reported in the English literature. This rarity calls for an awareness of its possibility as a cause of furuncular breast lesions, especially in areas where the C. anthropophaga (Tumbu fly) is endemic or in patients returning from s...

Journal: :The Journal of Cell Biology 2003
Nicole LeBrasseur

Hox signals death for neuronal precursors he number of neurons in an adult fly is determined by a death-inducing blast of a homeodomain protein, based on results from When the fly larva hatches, neurons are nearly evenly distributed along the major body axis. But in the adult, they are more numerous in the segments of the thorax than the abdomen, in part because neural stem cells (NSCs) in the ...

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