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Book ChapterDOI

The piroplasms: life cycle and sexual stages.

Heinz Mehlhorn, +1 more
- 01 Jan 1984 - 
- Vol. 23, pp 37-103
TLDR
Comparative biological and morphological studies show that the economically important piroplasms comprise three groups: (1) Babesia species sensu strictu ; (2) Bubesia equi , B. microti ; and (3) Theileria species.
Abstract
Publisher Summary The piroplasms are protozoa that are highly pathogenic to cattle, sheep, goats, and occasionally even to man. They comprise two genera—namely, Theileria and Babesia . The diseases they induce, known collectively as “theilerioses” and “babesioses,” cause fevers and lead to important economic losses in the tropics, subtropics, and southern Europe. This chapter highlights the differences between the life cycles of Babesia and Theileria species with respect to their morphology, studied by means of light and electron microscopy. The chapter describes the life cycle of piroplasms. They have a typical sporozoan life cycle comprising three phases: (1) Schizogony, an asexual reproduction phase in the vertebrate host. (2) Gumogony, the formation and fusion of gametes inside the intestinal cells of ixodid ticks. (3) Sporogony, an asexual reproduction in the salivary gland of the tick leading to the infectious, saliva-transmitted sporozoites. Comparative biological and morphological studies show that the economically important piroplasms comprise three groups: (1) Babesia species sensu strictu ; (2) Bubesia equi , B. microti ; and (3) Theileria species.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Babesiosis of cattle.

TL;DR: This review describes the biology of Babesia spp.
Journal ArticleDOI

Biology of ticks.

TL;DR: Abatement and control of ticks emphasizes a broad approach because of the differing types of habitats in which pest species may be found, and the use of repellents and acaricides as well as cultural and management practices are of primary importance.

Babesiosis of cattle.

TL;DR: A review of Babesia spp. in the host and the tick, the scale of the problem to the cattle industry, various components of control programmes, epidemiology, pathogenesis, immunity, vaccination and future research is presented in this article.
Journal ArticleDOI

Babesia--a historical overview.

TL;DR: The classical differences with the main other genus of non-pigment-forming hemoparasites, Theileria, are the absence of extra-erythrocytic multiplication (schizogony) in Babesia and the cycle in the vector tick, which includes transovarial transmission in babesia but only transstadial transmission in TheILeria.
References
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Journal Article

Infectious Blood Diseases of Man and Animals

TL;DR: Under blood protists are found concepts, cultivation and nutritional requirements, leads to chemotherapy, protozoa invading and not invading, development and reproduction (vertebrate and anthropod host), preservation and storage in vitro, mechanisms of inheritance in blood protozera, locomotion of blood protist, among other subjects.
Book

Investigations Into the Nature, Causation, and Prevention of Texas or Southern Cattle Fever

TL;DR: This book serves as "a report on the nature, causation, and prevention of Texas cattle fever" or the infection of cattle by ticks and includes statistical tables and illustrations of red blood corpuscles infected by ticks.
Journal ArticleDOI

The life cycle of Babesia bigemina (Smith and Kilborne, 1893) in the tick vector Boophilus microplus (Canestrini)

RF Riek
TL;DR: The protozoan Babesia bigemina, a cause of tick fever in cattle, is transmitted in Australia by Boophilus microplus, and its development in the lumen of the gut of the tick during the first 24 hr after ingestion remains uncertain.
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