Introduction: Secondary craniosynostosis subsequent to shunting is one of the late complications of ventricular shunt placement in the early childhood. Several interventions have been used to treat high intracranial pressure associated with this condition. This study aimed to evaluate the patients' clinical symptoms and head circumference before and after a method of decompressive craniotomy, coined as external-internal cranial expansion (EICE).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFExp Appl Acarol
September 2013
Severe intraspecific competition for mates selects for aggressive individuals but may also lead to the evolution of alternative phenotypes that do not act aggressively, yet manage to acquire matings. The two-spotted spider mite, Tetranychus urticae, shows male mate-guarding behaviour and male-male combat for available females. This may provide opportunity for weaker males to avoid fighting by adopting alternative mating behaviour such as sneaker or satellite tactics as observed in other animals.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOne of the most promising plant species for biofuel production in Brazil is the physic nut Jatropha curcas. Major phytosanitary problems include the attack of two pest mite species, the broad mite Polyphagotarsonemus latus and the spider mite Tetranychus bastosi. Owing to pesticide-related problems, there is an increasing demand for sustainable environmental-friendly control methods such as biological control.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe poultry red mite, Dermanyssus gallinae, is currently a significant pest in the poultry industry in Europe. Biological control by the introduction of predatory mites is one of the various options for controlling poultry red mites. Here, we present the first results of an attempt to identify potential predators by surveying the mite fauna of European starling (Sturnus vulgaris) nests, by assessing their ability to feed on poultry red mites and by testing for their inability to extract blood from bird hosts, i.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDebris often hampers the detection of mites in washed leaf samples. We describe in detail a method for the extraction of mites from leaf samples, based on the adherence of mite cuticles to liquid paraffin, at the interface of paraffin and ethanol in a so-called mite-counting channel. We demonstrate its efficacy by comparing the mite numbers in samples before and after extraction.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMany arthropods produce clusters of eggs, but an unambiguous explanation for the evolution of egg clustering is still lacking. We test several hypotheses for the production of egg clusters by the predatory mite Iphiseius degenerans. This predator feeds on pollen, thrips larvae and nectar in flowers, but oviposits in clusters in tufts of leaf hairs (acarodomatia), where eggs run a lower risk of being killed by thrips, the prey of this predatory mite.
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