International audienceThe coevolution between a host and its obligate parasite is exemplified in the sucking lice that infest primates. In the context of close lice-host partnerships and cospeciation, Pediculus mjobergi, the louse of New World primates, has long been puzzling because its morphology resembles that of human lice. To investigate the possibility that P. mjobergi was transmitted to monkeys from the first humans who set foot on the American continent thousands of years ago, we obtained and compared P. mjobergi lice collected from howler monkeys from Argentina to human lice gathered from a remote and isolated village in Amazonia that has escaped globalization. Morphological examinations were first conducted and verified the simila...
International audienceBACKGROUND: Head lice, Pediculus humanus capitis, occur in four divergent mito...
Three different lineages of head lice are known to parasitize humans. Clade A, which is currently wo...
Anthropological studies suggest that the genetic makeup of human populations in the Americas is the ...
International audienceThe coevolution between a host and its obligate parasite is exemplified in the...
International audienceThe head louse, Pediculus humanus capitis , is a strictly obligate human ectop...
International audiencePediculus humanus is an obligate and highly intimate bloodsucking insect paras...
Pediculus humanus is an obligate and highly intimate bloodsucking insect parasite of humans that has...
Abstract Background The parasitic sucking lice of primates are known to have undergone at least 25 m...
Background. Three distinctly different lineages of head and body lice are known to parasitize humans...
Parasites can be used as unique markers to investigate host evolutionary history, independent of hos...
The human louse, Pediculus humanus, is an obligate blood-sucking ectoparasite that has coevolved wit...
Parasites can be used as unique markers to investigate host evolutionary history, independent of hos...
International audienceBACKGROUND: Head lice, Pediculus humanus capitis, occur in four divergent mito...
Three different lineages of head lice are known to parasitize humans. Clade A, which is currently wo...
Anthropological studies suggest that the genetic makeup of human populations in the Americas is the ...
International audienceThe coevolution between a host and its obligate parasite is exemplified in the...
International audienceThe head louse, Pediculus humanus capitis , is a strictly obligate human ectop...
International audiencePediculus humanus is an obligate and highly intimate bloodsucking insect paras...
Pediculus humanus is an obligate and highly intimate bloodsucking insect parasite of humans that has...
Abstract Background The parasitic sucking lice of primates are known to have undergone at least 25 m...
Background. Three distinctly different lineages of head and body lice are known to parasitize humans...
Parasites can be used as unique markers to investigate host evolutionary history, independent of hos...
The human louse, Pediculus humanus, is an obligate blood-sucking ectoparasite that has coevolved wit...
Parasites can be used as unique markers to investigate host evolutionary history, independent of hos...
International audienceBACKGROUND: Head lice, Pediculus humanus capitis, occur in four divergent mito...
Three different lineages of head lice are known to parasitize humans. Clade A, which is currently wo...
Anthropological studies suggest that the genetic makeup of human populations in the Americas is the ...