The Great African Lakes in Uganda (Lake Albert and Lake Victoria) are known habitats to several sympatric species of Biomphalaria, intermediate snail hosts of the human parasite Schistosoma mansoni. However, accurate identification of snails by morphology alone can be problematic, highlighting a need for robust, on-site identification methods, since only certain species have important roles in parasite transmission. This study investigates the conchological variation within Biomphalaria species collected from these two Great East African Lakes. We compared the shell morphologies of Biomphalaria species using landmark-based morphometric techniques and were able to distinguish Biomphalaria species through canonical variate analysis (CVA) of t...
Abstract. Two species of Biomphalaria are reported from Egypt, the indigenous Biomphalaria alexandri...
Identification of populations of Bulinus nasutus and B. globosus from East Africa is unreliable usin...
This study was carried out in five sites along a small perennial river system in south-central Tanza...
The Great African Lakes in Uganda (Lake Albert and Lake Victoria) are known habitats to several symp...
The three known sympatric Biomphalaria species that occur in Lake Albert; B. choanomphala, B. stanle...
Biomphalaria pfeifferi, B. stanleyi and B. sudanica were present at Lake Albert, while the two morph...
Lake Victoria is a known hot-spot for Schistosoma mansoni, which utilises freshwater snails of the g...
Lake Victoria is a known hot-spot for Schistosoma mansoni, which utilises freshwater snails of the g...
This study documented the population dynamics of Biomphalaria and associated natural infections with...
This study documented the population dynamics of Biomphalaria and associated natural infections with...
The wide geographic distribution of Schistosoma mansoni, a digenetic trematode and parasite of human...
The freshwater snail Potamopyrgus antipodarum has become a model system for studying invasion ecolog...
Abstract Background Schistosomiasis is hyper-endemic in the Lake Victoria basin; with intestinal sch...
Intestinal schistosomiasis is hyperendemic in many sub-Saharan African countries. In Uganda, it is e...
Background: The freshwater snail Biomphalaria acts as the intermediate host of Schistosoma mansoni, ...
Abstract. Two species of Biomphalaria are reported from Egypt, the indigenous Biomphalaria alexandri...
Identification of populations of Bulinus nasutus and B. globosus from East Africa is unreliable usin...
This study was carried out in five sites along a small perennial river system in south-central Tanza...
The Great African Lakes in Uganda (Lake Albert and Lake Victoria) are known habitats to several symp...
The three known sympatric Biomphalaria species that occur in Lake Albert; B. choanomphala, B. stanle...
Biomphalaria pfeifferi, B. stanleyi and B. sudanica were present at Lake Albert, while the two morph...
Lake Victoria is a known hot-spot for Schistosoma mansoni, which utilises freshwater snails of the g...
Lake Victoria is a known hot-spot for Schistosoma mansoni, which utilises freshwater snails of the g...
This study documented the population dynamics of Biomphalaria and associated natural infections with...
This study documented the population dynamics of Biomphalaria and associated natural infections with...
The wide geographic distribution of Schistosoma mansoni, a digenetic trematode and parasite of human...
The freshwater snail Potamopyrgus antipodarum has become a model system for studying invasion ecolog...
Abstract Background Schistosomiasis is hyper-endemic in the Lake Victoria basin; with intestinal sch...
Intestinal schistosomiasis is hyperendemic in many sub-Saharan African countries. In Uganda, it is e...
Background: The freshwater snail Biomphalaria acts as the intermediate host of Schistosoma mansoni, ...
Abstract. Two species of Biomphalaria are reported from Egypt, the indigenous Biomphalaria alexandri...
Identification of populations of Bulinus nasutus and B. globosus from East Africa is unreliable usin...
This study was carried out in five sites along a small perennial river system in south-central Tanza...