1982
DOI: 10.1017/s1742758400005725
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The ecology of tsetse (Glossina spp.) (Diptera, Glossinidae): a review (1970–1981)

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Cited by 35 publications
(34 citation statements)
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“…This species lives in humid savannah and can easily disperse through the forests along riverbanks. Such linear dispersal through suitable habitat was also observed for G. palpalis , for which mark-release-recapture studies indicate that it can disperse up to 21 km in 5 days along gallery forests [32],[65], but only 8 km along rivers with bare banks [66]. However, gene flow among G. gambiensis populations seems to occur not only within single river systems, but also among populations distributed in the different river basins of Mali [67].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 69%
“…This species lives in humid savannah and can easily disperse through the forests along riverbanks. Such linear dispersal through suitable habitat was also observed for G. palpalis , for which mark-release-recapture studies indicate that it can disperse up to 21 km in 5 days along gallery forests [32],[65], but only 8 km along rivers with bare banks [66]. However, gene flow among G. gambiensis populations seems to occur not only within single river systems, but also among populations distributed in the different river basins of Mali [67].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 69%
“…This is unusual and at variance with observations made with G. m. morsitans where more female than male tenerals were trapped with mobile devices (Vale and Phelps, 1978). Mobile and stationary tsetse sampling devices usually trap more teneral flies than this theoretical percentage of 5% (Challier, 1982), except for G. The proportion of male and female G. ansteni tenerals trapped in this study was 6.7% and 5.5%, respectively, which is assumed to be representative of a stable tsetse population.…”
Section: Discussioncontrasting
confidence: 51%
“…Our comparative analyses that pit the five principal hypotheses against each other indicate that biting flies (hypotheses v(a) and v(b)) are the evolutionary drivers for striping in equids, at least on most regions of the body ( Table 1). Many of our independent variables were highly intercorrelated; for instance, spotted hyaenas inhabit the hot tropics and subtropics 25 and tsetse flies rest on trees 26 . Therefore, we can only be confident of our findings stemming from a model selection procedure that pits factors against each other to see the relative importance of each in explaining variation across all possible models.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%