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A. Choudhury

Bio: A. Choudhury is an academic researcher from University of Calcutta. The author has contributed to research in topics: Shrike & Turtle (robot). The author has an hindex of 3, co-authored 8 publications receiving 44 citations.

Papers
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Journal Article
TL;DR: Life histories of three new coccidian parasites obtained from the larvae of three different coleopteran stored-grain pests, Tribolium castaneum Herbst, Alphitobius piceus Olivier and Palorus ratzeburgii Wissmann, respectively, have been described in detail.
Abstract: Summary. Life histories of three new coccidian parasites (Protozoa: Apicomplexa: Coccidia) obtained from the larvae of three different coleopteran stored-grain pests, Tribolium castaneum Herbst, Alphitobius piceus Olivier and Palorus ratzeburgii Wissmann, respectively, have been described in detail. These coccidian parasites belong to the genus Adelina Hesse 1911 and are named as Adelina castana sp. n., Adelina picei sp. n. and Adelina palori sp. n. The complete life histories of these parasites are observed on the fat bodies along with the body fluid of the hosts. A comprehensive comparative account of three life histories is presented in tabular form.

12 citations


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TL;DR: It is concluded that cats infected with T. evansi have normocytic, normochromic, regenerative anemia.

35 citations

Journal Article
TL;DR: Cet article rapporte trois cas cliniques de trypanosomose a Trypanosoma evansi (« surra ») chez des chats Koweitiens arabes-Koweitien dans les symptomes, les anomalies hematologiques and the resultats du traitement sont decrits.
Abstract: Cet article rapporte trois cas cliniques de trypanosomose a Trypanosoma evansi (« surra ») chez des chats Koweitiens. Les symptomes, les anomalies hematologiques et les resultats du traitement sont decrits.

34 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The therapy used is effective in controlling T. evansi in cats andAlanine aminotransferase, gamma-glutamyltransferase, urea, and creatinine values remained within the normal physiological range in the treated cats.

32 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The incompleteness of the morphological data and relatively low host specificity provides the space for large synonymy within this taxon, so a complex approach combining microscopic analyses together with molecular-genetic methods should represent the basic standard for all taxonomic studies.
Abstract: The uniform morphology of the developmental stages of Haemogregarina species and the insufficient information supplied by the simplistic descriptions of previous authors complicates their differential diagnosis and proper species identification. In this study, we detected Haemogregarina spp. in 6 out of 22 (27·2%) examined turtles originating from Southeast Asia, Malayemys subtrijuga (n = 4), Sacalia quadriocellata (n = 1) and Platysternon megacephalum (n = 1), and compared them with the available literature data. Microscopic analysis of our isolates distinguished 2 morphological species, Haemogregarina pellegrini and one new species, being described in this paper as Haemogregarina sacaliae sp. n. Phylogenetic analyses based on 1210 bp long fragment of 18S rDNA sequences placed both haemogregarines firmly within the monophyletic Haemogregarina clade. Isolates of H. pellegrini from 2 distantly related turtle hosts, M. subtrijuga and P. megacephalum, were genetically identical. Despite the fact that numerous Haemogregarina species of turtles have been described, the incompleteness of the morphological data and relatively low host specificity provides the space for large synonymy within this taxon. Therefore, a complex approach combining microscopic analyses together with molecular-genetic methods should represent the basic standard for all taxonomic studies.

31 citations