Rhipicephalus appendiculatus is an important tick vector of several pathogens and parasitizes domestic and wild animals across eastern and southern Africa. However, its inherent genetic variation and population structure is poorly understood. To investigate whether mammalian host species, geographic separation and resulting reproductive isolation, or a combination of these, define the genetic structure of R. appendiculatus, we analyzed multi-locus genotype data from 392 individuals from 10 geographic locations in Kenya generated in an earlier study. These ticks were associated with three types of mammalian host situations; (1) cattle grazing systems, (2) cattle and wildlife co-grazing systems (3) wildlife grazing systems without livestock. ...
Assessment of tick dispersal is a central issue for the understanding of the eco-epidemiology of tic...
Rhipicephalus sanguineus s.l. (Latreille, 1806), the brown dog tick, is the most widely distributed ...
INTRODUCTION:The most significant vector of tick-borne pathogens in the United States is Ixodes scap...
Rhipicephalus appendiculatus is an important tick vector of several pathogens and parasitizes domest...
Recently there was an expansion in the geographic range of Rhipicephalus microplus in Zimbabwe. In o...
Based on their ecology, Rhipicephalus appendiculatus ticks from eastern and southern Africa have bee...
Commercial vaccines based on recombinant forms of the Bm86 tick gut antigen are used to control the ...
Understanding factors that shape tick population genetic structure is important as they may be explo...
Rhipicephalus microplus and R. decoloratus are one-host ticks that preferentially feed on cattle. Th...
Background: The cattle tick, Rhipicephalus (Boophilus) microplus, economically impact cattle industr...
A comparative phylogeographic study on two economically important African tick species, Amblyomma he...
Background The tick vector Rhipicephalus microplus which transmits Babesia spp. and rickettsial path...
The dispersal and subsequent gene flow within parasite species is the result of a complex interactio...
The hard ticks Amblyomma variegatum is the main vector of Ehrlichia ruminantium the pathogen respons...
Ticks have been known to cause severe economic losses due to cattle deaths, low milk production, poo...
Assessment of tick dispersal is a central issue for the understanding of the eco-epidemiology of tic...
Rhipicephalus sanguineus s.l. (Latreille, 1806), the brown dog tick, is the most widely distributed ...
INTRODUCTION:The most significant vector of tick-borne pathogens in the United States is Ixodes scap...
Rhipicephalus appendiculatus is an important tick vector of several pathogens and parasitizes domest...
Recently there was an expansion in the geographic range of Rhipicephalus microplus in Zimbabwe. In o...
Based on their ecology, Rhipicephalus appendiculatus ticks from eastern and southern Africa have bee...
Commercial vaccines based on recombinant forms of the Bm86 tick gut antigen are used to control the ...
Understanding factors that shape tick population genetic structure is important as they may be explo...
Rhipicephalus microplus and R. decoloratus are one-host ticks that preferentially feed on cattle. Th...
Background: The cattle tick, Rhipicephalus (Boophilus) microplus, economically impact cattle industr...
A comparative phylogeographic study on two economically important African tick species, Amblyomma he...
Background The tick vector Rhipicephalus microplus which transmits Babesia spp. and rickettsial path...
The dispersal and subsequent gene flow within parasite species is the result of a complex interactio...
The hard ticks Amblyomma variegatum is the main vector of Ehrlichia ruminantium the pathogen respons...
Ticks have been known to cause severe economic losses due to cattle deaths, low milk production, poo...
Assessment of tick dispersal is a central issue for the understanding of the eco-epidemiology of tic...
Rhipicephalus sanguineus s.l. (Latreille, 1806), the brown dog tick, is the most widely distributed ...
INTRODUCTION:The most significant vector of tick-borne pathogens in the United States is Ixodes scap...