Modelling knowlesi malaria transmission in humans: vector preference and host competence
<p>Background: <em>Plasmodium knowlesi</em>, a malaria species that normally infects long-tailed macaques, was recently found to be prevalent in humans in Southeast Asia. While human host competency has been demonstrated experimentally, the extent to which the parasite can be trans...
Váldodahkkit: | Yakob, L, Bonsall, M, Yan, G |
---|---|
Materiálatiipa: | Journal article |
Giella: | English |
Almmustuhtton: |
BioMed Central
2010
|
Fáttát: |
Geahča maid
-
The dominant Anopheles vectors of human malaria in the Americas: occurrence data, distribution maps and bionomic précis
Dahkki: Sinka, M, et al.
Almmustuhtton: (2010) -
Avian malaria associations with British mosquitoes
Dahkki: Alves, R, et al.
Almmustuhtton: (2012) -
Application of the lumped age-class technique to studying the dynamics of malaria-mosquito-human interactions
Dahkki: Hancock, P, et al.
Almmustuhtton: (2007) -
Avian malaria in the montane tropics
Dahkki: Daly, B
Almmustuhtton: (2013) -
Predators reduce extinction risk in noisy metapopulations
Dahkki: Bull, J, et al.
Almmustuhtton: (2010)