نتایج جستجو برای: haemoproteus columbae

تعداد نتایج: 336  

2011
S B Oladele O O Okubanjo

A total of ninety-eight wild birds, comprising eleven different species were captured alive from Zaria environs. These birds were used for the study, to determine the possible role they play as reservoirs of blood parasites. Thin blood smears (TBS) were prepared from the blood samples collected from these wild birds. The slides were stained and viewed under the microscope for the identification...

Journal: :The Journal of parasitology 2012
Iris I Levin Gediminas Valkiūnas Tatjana A Iezhova Sarah L O'Brien Patricia G Parker

Haemoproteus (Haemoproteus) jenniae n. sp. (Haemosporida: Haemoproteidae) is described from a Galapagos bird, the swallow-tailed gull Creagrus furcatus (Charadriiformes, Laridae), based on the morphology of its blood stages and segments of the mitochondrial cytochrome b (cyt b) gene. The most distinctive features of H. jenniae development are the circumnuclear gametocytes occupying all cytoplas...

Journal: :The Journal of parasitology 2002
Susan L Perkins Jos J Schall

A phylogeny of haemosporidian parasites (phylum Apicomplexa, family Plasmodiidae) was recovered using mitochondrial cytochrome b gene sequences from 52 species in 4 genera (Plasmodium, Hepatocystis, Haemoproteus, and Leucocytozoon), including parasite species infecting mammals, birds, and reptiles from over a wide geographic range. Leucocytozoon species emerged as an appropriate out-group for t...

2014
Matthieu Bastien Audrey Jaeger Matthieu Le Corre Pablo Tortosa Camille Lebarbenchon

Blood parasites of the sub-genus Haemoproteus have been reported in seabirds, in particular in species in the Suliformes order. These parasites are transmitted by hippoboscid flies of the genus Olfersia; strong specificity has been suggested between the vector and its vertebrate host. We investigated the prevalence of Haemoproteus infection in Suliformes and hippoboscid flies in two oceanic isl...

Journal: :Journal of wildlife diseases 1993
B E Young M C Garvin D B McDonald

In a survey of avian blood parasites in Costa Rica, 51 (11%) of 479 birds sampled were infected by at least one species of hematozoan. Fourteen of the 60 species of birds in the survey were examined for the first time. Infections were most common in ramphastids and emberizids and infrequent in other taxa. Among resident species, infections were more commonly detected during the wet season when ...

2015
Raquel Tostes Usha Vashist Kézia K.G. Scopel Carlos L. Massard Marta D’Agosto

Tostes R., Vashist U., Scopel K.K.G., Massard C.L., Daemon E. & D’Agosto M. 2015. Plasmodium spp. and Haemoproteus spp. infection in birds of the Brazilian Atlantic Forest detected by microscopy and polymerase chain reaction. Pesquisa Veterinária Brasileira 35(1):67-74. Curso de Pós-Graduação em Ciências Veterinárias, Instituto de Veterinária, Universidade Federal Rural do Rio de Janeiro, BR-46...

Journal: :Proceedings. Biological sciences 2000
S Bensch M Stjernman D Hasselquist O Ostman B Hansson H Westerdahl R T Pinheiro

A fragment of the mitochondrial cytochrome b gene of avian malaria (genera Haemoproteus and Plasmodium) was amplified from blood samples of 12 species of passerine birds from the genera Acrocephalus, Phylloscopus and Parus. By sequencing 478 nucleotides of the obtained fragments, we found 17 different mitochondrial haplotypes of Haemoproteus or Plasmodium among the 12 bird species investigated....

2017
Farah Ishtiaq Christopher G R Bowden Yadvendradev V Jhala

We examined seasonal prevalence in avian haemosporidians (Plasmodium and Haemoproteus) in migrant and resident birds in western Himalaya, India. We investigated how infection with haemosporidians in avian hosts is associated with temporal changes in temperature and mosquito abundance along with host abundance and life-history traits (body mass). Using molecular methods for parasite detection an...

Journal: :Molecular ecology 2011
Josué Martínez-de la Puente Javier Martínez Juan Rivero-de Aguilar Jessica Herrero Santiago Merino

The study of host-parasite relationships involving vector-borne parasites requires understanding interactions between parasites and vectors. The capacity of haemosporidians to infect insects has clear evolutionary consequences for the transmission of diseases. Here, we investigated (i) the associations between blood parasites, biting midges and birds and (ii) the potential specificity between b...

2013
Viviana González Astudillo Sonia M. Hernández Whitney M. Kistler Shaun L. Boone Erin K. Lipp Sudip Shrestha Michael J. Yabsley

The prevalence of five avian haemoparasite groups was examined for effects on health and associations with extrinsic factors. Overall, 786 samples were examined from six sites in two Georgia (USA) watersheds, during breeding and non-breeding periods in 2010 and 2011. Among the four most commonly infected species, Haemoproteus prevalence was significantly higher in Northern Cardinals (Cardinalis...

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