1936
DOI: 10.1590/s0074-02761936000100005
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O Rhipicephalus sanguineus como transmissor da Piroplasmose canina no Brasil

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1956
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Cited by 15 publications
(15 citation statements)
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“…Sudachenkov (1941) found that ticks (1xorle.y ricinuu) collected from cattle a few months after initial infection with Babesia bovis could transmit infection to their progeny only to a very limited extent. Regendanz (1936) was not able to transmit B. bigemina with the progeny of some B. microplus fed on latently infected cattle. However, Theiler (1 907) apparently had no difficulty in obtaining transmission with the next generation of ticks (Boophilus decoloratus) descended from one growing on a B. bigemina carrier.…”
Section: Bubesia Bigmzinumentioning
confidence: 90%
“…Sudachenkov (1941) found that ticks (1xorle.y ricinuu) collected from cattle a few months after initial infection with Babesia bovis could transmit infection to their progeny only to a very limited extent. Regendanz (1936) was not able to transmit B. bigemina with the progeny of some B. microplus fed on latently infected cattle. However, Theiler (1 907) apparently had no difficulty in obtaining transmission with the next generation of ticks (Boophilus decoloratus) descended from one growing on a B. bigemina carrier.…”
Section: Bubesia Bigmzinumentioning
confidence: 90%
“…Among the tick species implicated in the transmission of pathogens to them [79-81], Rh. sanguineus is undoubtedly the most important species from the veterinary standpoint.…”
Section: Concluding Remarks and Research Needsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Dennis (1932) studied its development in B. annulatus but according to Reichenow (1935), some of the stages described are not those of B. bigemina but those of symbionts. Regendanz (1936)…”
Section: Biological Transmissionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…sanguineus, for five generations. Studies on the life cycle of R. canis in ticks have been conducted by Christophers (1907a, b), Regendanz and Muniz (1936), and Shortt (1936) in Rh. sanguineus, and by Regendanz and Reichenow (1933) and Brumpt (1937) in D. marginalus.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%