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ผลงานตีพิมพ์ในวารสารวิชาการRodent-borne Hantaviruses in Cambodia, Lao.PDR and Thailandผู้แต่ง:Kim Blasdell, Jean FrancoisCosson, Yannick Chaval, Vincent Herbreteau, Bounneuang Douangboupha, Dr.Sathaporn Jittapalapong, Professor, Ake Lundqvis, Jean-Pierre Hugot, Serge Morand, Philippe Buchy, วารสาร: |
หัวเรื่อง:ไม่มีชื่อไทย (ชื่ออังกฤษ : A Multi-Approach Survey as the most Reliable Tool to Accurately Assess Biodiversity: an Example of Thai Murine Rodents) ผู้เขียน:Yannick Chaval, Gauthier Dobigny, Johan Michaux, Marie Pag?s, C?line Corbisier, Jean-Fran?ois Cosson, Vincent Herbreteau สื่อสิ่งพิมพ์:pdf AbstractWildlife surveys rely on an accurate taxonomic framework. Identification tools used to reach this goal are not equivalent and may depend on several objectives and constraints, including sampling conservation difficulties, the invasiveness of the sampling techniques, sampling capacity, the relevance of the results, materials needed, the cost and the user time required in the field and laboratory. This article presents and discusses the advantages and limits of each identification tool used in the Ceropath (Community ecology of rodents and their pathogens in South East Asia) program to reach a fast and relevant identification of the rodents sampled. It is concluded that there needs to be a combination of the results from different methods, including the most recent ones, to achieve an improvement in taxonomic identification. |
หัวเรื่อง:ไม่มีชื่อไทย (ชื่ออังกฤษ : “Rodent Biodiversity Human Health and Pest Control in a Changing Environments” Relationship of Parasites and Pathogens Diversity to Rodents in Thailand) ผู้เขียน:ดร.สถาพร จิตตปาลพงศ์, ศาสตราจารย์, Vincent Herbreteau, Jean-Pierre Hugot, นายพีระ อารีศรีสม, อาจารย์, Anamika Karnchanabanthoeng, ดร.วรวุฒิ ฤกษ์อำนวยโชค, รองศาสตราจารย์, Serge Morand สื่อสิ่งพิมพ์:pdf AbstractRodents have proven to be of increasing importance in transmitting diseases to humans in recent decades, through the emergence of worldwide epidemics and, in Thailand, through the emergence of leptospirosis and scrub typhus. Investigations of parasites and pathogens in murine rodents have helped to describe the implication of the main species and understand the different ways of transmission. From wild to anthropized habitats, rodents can be reservoirs, hosts or vectors of infectious organisms. Related species can react very differently to the same pathogens, with pivotal implications for the understanding of their natural circulation. Scrub typhus is transmitted to humans through the bites of trombiculid mites that have previously fed on infected rodents, generally occurring in wild habitats. Leptospirosis can affect people without any direct contact with infected rodents, but by indirect spread in agricultural areas. Parasitic diseases, such as toxoplasmosis and trypanosomiasis benefit from the proximity of rodents to domesticated animals to jump from one vector to another before reaching humans. By occupying almost all biotopes and by rapidly adapting to environmental changes, rodents are fundamental in the maintenance and transmission of an impressive number of infectious organisms to humans. |
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