During the summer of 1953, Mr. Edward T. Roche, of the Department of Zoology, University of Southern California, continued observations on the life history of the ground squirrel, Citellus undulatus barrowensis (Merriam), along the Meade River south of Point Barrow, Alaska. In the course of this work, 55 ground squirrels were examined for intestinal parasites, and were found commonly to harbor cestodes. Mr. Roche kindly offered a number of these cestodes to the writer for study, and they represent an undescribed species of Paranoplocephala Liihe, 1910. In appreciation of the generous cooperation extended to the personnel of this laboratory by Dr. Ira L. Wiggins, formerly Scientific Director of the Arctic Research Laboratory, Office of Naval...
Cestodes representing six species of the genus Diphyllobothrium Cobbold, 1858, were collected from n...
In 1948 much interest in trichinosis in arctic regions was aroused, particularly by the findings of ...
Biotic interrelationships in Alaska have so far suffered little from man\u27s attempts to improve up...
Among Alaskan mammals examined for helminthic parasites during 1950 was a series of marmots, Marmota...
As the result of field and laboratory investigations extending over a period of more than four years...
The genus Schistotaenia Cohn, 1900, at present includes six species, all parasites of grebes (Podici...
Plerocercoid larvae of Diphyllobothrium spp. occur commonly in various species of freshwater and ana...
Schizorchis caballeroi n. sp. has been described from the collared pika, Ochotona collaris (Nelson),...
Natural biotic relationships already had been severely disrupted in the United States by the time si...
According to Eguchi (1934), two species of salmon (Oncorhynchus) serve as a source of human infectio...
Among helminths taken from four northern flying squirrels (Glaucomys sabrinus macrotis Mearns) were ...
Aploparaksis turdi sp. n. (Cestoda: Hymenolepididae) is described from the robin, Turdus migratorius...
The occurrence of the larval stage of Echinococcus granulosus (Batsch, 1786) in a microtine rodent, ...
The occurrence of a species of Echinococcus (Rudolphi, 1801) on St Lawrence Island was noted by the ...
The study of a collection of cestodes assigned to the genus Diplogonoporus Lönnberg, 1892 disclosed ...
Cestodes representing six species of the genus Diphyllobothrium Cobbold, 1858, were collected from n...
In 1948 much interest in trichinosis in arctic regions was aroused, particularly by the findings of ...
Biotic interrelationships in Alaska have so far suffered little from man\u27s attempts to improve up...
Among Alaskan mammals examined for helminthic parasites during 1950 was a series of marmots, Marmota...
As the result of field and laboratory investigations extending over a period of more than four years...
The genus Schistotaenia Cohn, 1900, at present includes six species, all parasites of grebes (Podici...
Plerocercoid larvae of Diphyllobothrium spp. occur commonly in various species of freshwater and ana...
Schizorchis caballeroi n. sp. has been described from the collared pika, Ochotona collaris (Nelson),...
Natural biotic relationships already had been severely disrupted in the United States by the time si...
According to Eguchi (1934), two species of salmon (Oncorhynchus) serve as a source of human infectio...
Among helminths taken from four northern flying squirrels (Glaucomys sabrinus macrotis Mearns) were ...
Aploparaksis turdi sp. n. (Cestoda: Hymenolepididae) is described from the robin, Turdus migratorius...
The occurrence of the larval stage of Echinococcus granulosus (Batsch, 1786) in a microtine rodent, ...
The occurrence of a species of Echinococcus (Rudolphi, 1801) on St Lawrence Island was noted by the ...
The study of a collection of cestodes assigned to the genus Diplogonoporus Lönnberg, 1892 disclosed ...
Cestodes representing six species of the genus Diphyllobothrium Cobbold, 1858, were collected from n...
In 1948 much interest in trichinosis in arctic regions was aroused, particularly by the findings of ...
Biotic interrelationships in Alaska have so far suffered little from man\u27s attempts to improve up...