2006
DOI: 10.1645/ge-3515.1
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An Approach to Revealing Blood Fluke Life Cycles, Taxonomy, and Diversity: Provision of Key Reference Data Including Dna Sequence From Single Life Cycle Stages

Abstract: Revealing diversity among extant blood flukes, and the patterns of relationships among them, has been hindered by the difficulty of determining if specimens described from different life cycle stages, hosts, geographic localities, and times represent the same or different species. Persistent collection of all available life cycle stages and provision of exact collection localities, host identification, reference DNA sequences for the parasite, and voucher specimens eventually will provide the framework needed … Show more

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Cited by 83 publications
(109 citation statements)
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“…The genus Bivitellobilharzia is considered a schistosome of elephants, but it has also been reported from wild rhinoceroses in Nepal (38)(39)(40)(41). There are no known reports of cercarial dermatitis in humans from areas inhabited by African elephants (with the Bivitellobilharzia loxodontae schistosome), but in areas where domesticated Asian elephants are used, there have been cases of dermatitis in the mahouts, or elephant handlers, when the elephants are taken for bathing (e.g., in Sri Lanka [40]).…”
Section: Diversity Of Schistosomes Causing Dermatitismentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The genus Bivitellobilharzia is considered a schistosome of elephants, but it has also been reported from wild rhinoceroses in Nepal (38)(39)(40)(41). There are no known reports of cercarial dermatitis in humans from areas inhabited by African elephants (with the Bivitellobilharzia loxodontae schistosome), but in areas where domesticated Asian elephants are used, there have been cases of dermatitis in the mahouts, or elephant handlers, when the elephants are taken for bathing (e.g., in Sri Lanka [40]).…”
Section: Diversity Of Schistosomes Causing Dermatitismentioning
confidence: 99%
“…There are no known reports of cercarial dermatitis in humans from areas inhabited by African elephants (with the Bivitellobilharzia loxodontae schistosome), but in areas where domesticated Asian elephants are used, there have been cases of dermatitis in the mahouts, or elephant handlers, when the elephants are taken for bathing (e.g., in Sri Lanka [40]). In Nepal, Bivitellobilharzia nairi has thus far been found in wild, not domesticated, elephants (38).…”
Section: Diversity Of Schistosomes Causing Dermatitismentioning
confidence: 99%
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