Publications by authors named "Rechav Y"

This study investigated the effect of blood feeding on respiratory gas exchange in the dog tick Dermacentor variabilis. Adult male and female ticks were fed on bovine hosts from 1 to 11days. Females fed slowly for the first 6days and then rapidly engorged on blood 2-3days prior to dropping from the host.

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Four white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) were inoculated intravenously with a deer-origin isolate (15B-WTD-GA) of Ehrlichia chaffeensis. The course of infection was monitored using indirect fluorescent antibody (IFA), polymerase chain reaction (PCR), and culture over a 9 m period. All deer became rickettsemic within 24 days post inoculation (DPI), and all developed antibody titers >1:64 to E.

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A unique group of immunoglobulin-binding proteins (IGBPs), produced by ixodid male ticks during the latter half of their prolonged feeding period, improves the feeding performance of co-feeding females. As a follow-up to this observation, we investigated whether male tick feeding also affects the feeding of other developmental stages. Immature stages of Rhipicephalus sanguineus (Latreeille) and Amblyomma americanum (L.

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A study of ticks associated with wild animals was carried out from September 1996 to April 1998 at the Fazenda Alegria (21,000 ha), in the Nhecolândia Pantanal, State of Mato Grosso do Sul, Brazil, a sunken plain bordering the upper Paraguay river, located 19 x 08'S; 56 x 46'W. A total of 81 wild animals (13 species, 6 orders) were captured with the aid of nets, and ticks were found on 63 (78%). Tick species identified included Boophilus microplus (Canestrini), Amblyomma cajennense (F.

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This paper describes the identification of ticks from wild animals of the Pantanal region in Brazil as part of a comprehensive study about established and emerging tick-host relationships and related pathological aspects. Eighty-one animals were captured (representing 13 species, six orders), and ticks were found on 63 (78%). Tick species identified included Boophilus microplus (Canestrini), Amblyomma cajennense (F.

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Aggregation-attachment pheromones are produced only by male ticks of the genus Amblyomma that have imbibed blood for at least 8 d from their mammalian hosts. This report demonstrates that production and release of aggregation-attachment pheromones by Amblyomma maculatum (Koch) males can be induced in vitro by using nonblood media, artificially introduced through capillary tubes, into the male ticks. The presence of these pheromones is demonstrated by using both biological observations on bovine hosts and in vitro experimentation with petri dishes.

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In order to determine the effect of various hosts on the feeding performance of the tick Hyalomma truncatum, were used three mammalian species as hosts. Larvae and nymphs of H. truncatum were fed, under controlled laboratory conditions, on gerbils, guinea-pigs and rabbits.

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Evidence is presented for the existence of male-produced attachment pheromones in the tick Amblyomma cajennense (F). Unfed males and females attached significantly faster to shaved sides on bovine hosts where preattached males were present than did adult ticks released in control areas. Attached ticks did not form clusters around the preattached males as described for other species of Amblyomma.

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The survival of unfed males and females of six species of African ticks was monitored at five different saturation deficits at constant temperature (25 degrees C). The survivorship curves for each species comprised a pre-mortality period, prior to when ticks started to die and a mortality period corresponding to a rapid increase in the mortality rate. Longevity was defined as pre-mortality plus mortality.

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This study investigated the effect of acquired resistance in guinea-pigs on the metabolic rate of adult females of the tick Rhipicephalus evertsi evertsi. Guinea-pigs were subjected to three successive infestations of ticks and the rate of CO2 production (VCO2) measured in first and third infestation engorged females. Ticks which fed on resistant hosts showed a 52% decrease in mass compared to ticks that fed on naive animals.

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A survey of Amblyomma marmoreum Koch ticks recorded from the leopard tortoise, Geochelone paradalis Bell, in the National Zoological Gardens, Pretoria, South Africa, was carried out over a 19-mo period. No significant differences were found between the tick burdens on male and female tortoises. A.

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Guinea-pigs were infested three times at short (1 week) intervals or long (10 week) intervals between successive infestations with low (1), medium (8) and high (15) numbers of adult Rhipicephalus evertsi evertsi. To compare the resistance developed by the hosts at short and long intervals between infestations, a challenge (fourth) infestation was performed with the high number of ticks. Resistance was assessed by comparing the mean weight of engorged female ticks that dropped from the hosts.

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We have modified an experimental technique in which two different isotopes (Cr51 and I125) were used simultaneously as blood markers for determining the amount of blood removed by feeding ticks. This method enables us to measure separately and directly the volumes of red blood cells and plasma in ticks and to calculate the ratio between the two parameters (concentrating ability). The concentration of red blood cells in nymphs of Amblyomma hebraeum Kock and Rhipicephalus appendiculatus Neumann and in females of these species plus in those of Hyalomma truncatum Kock were found to be twice the amount measured in the labeled blood of goats.

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Respiratory gas exchange was studied in unfed adult Amblyomma hebraeum Koch. Carbon dioxide emission was measured at 25 degrees C using flow-through respirometry to determine standard metabolic rate and the temporal pattern of gaseous emission. The standard CO2 production rate (sVCO2) of inactive ticks was 0.

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The oxygen consumption of engorged nymphs of Hyalomma asiaticum was measured at various intervals after drop-off from mice hosts. Duration of nymphal development to the emergence of adults was 25-32 days at 25 degrees C. The oxygen consumption was high immediately after completing the blood meal (193-248 mm3 g-1 h-1 but decreased significantly 18 days later (at 25 degrees C) to 45-65 mm3 g-1 h-1.

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The concentrations of sodium, potassium, chloride, urea, creatinine, uric acid, total protein, albumin, inorganic phosphorous, calcium, magnesium, cholesterol, triglyceride, glucose, aspartate and alanine transaminases (AST and ALT), creatine kinase (CK), lactic acid dehydrogenase (LD), gamma-glutamyltransferase (GGT), alkaline phosphatase (ALP) and total bilirubin in the serum of a captive population of the mountain tortoise (Geochelone pardalis) (n = 13) were determined. Results varied considerably, particularly for most enzymes such as AST (11-113 U/l,ALT (1-72 U/l), CK (12-242 U/l), LD (147-2641 U/l) and ALP (56-168 U/l).

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The objective of this study was to establish the major features of respiratory gas exchange in unfed adults of the ticks Amblyomma hebraeum and A. marmoreum, both vectors of heartwater in Southern Africa. Carbon dioxide emission of ticks was measured at 25 degrees C using flow-through respirometry in order to determine standard metabolic rate (SMR) and the temporal pattern of gaseous emission.

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Rabbits and sheep were exposed to low- and high-protein diets and subsequently infested three times with adults of Rhipicephalus appendiculatus and Rhipicephalus evertsi evertsi. The mean weight of R.e.

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Himalayan rabbits immunized with homogenates prepared from nymphs of Amblyomma hebraeum Koch and A. marmoreum Koch ticks developed humoral and probably also cell-mediated immunity to their respective homogenates. Beta and gamma globulin levels and numbers of eosinophils and neutrophils increased significantly in inoculated rabbits.

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A comparative study was made of the life cycle of the tortoise tick, Amblyomma marmoreum Koch, on tortoises and guinea pigs under laboratory conditions. At 25 degrees C and 85% RH with natural day length, duration of off-host stages (preoviposition, oviposition, incubation, and premolt) was similar for ticks fed on both hosts. Delay in preoviposition (up to 90 d) was observed in some gravid females.

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A study of acquired resistance in guinea-pigs, guinea-fowl and tortoises to larvae of the ticks Amblyomma hebraeum Koch and A.marmoreum Koch (Acari: Ixodidae) showed that repeated infestations of the laboratory host resulted in a 29.3-49.

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Guinea-pigs inoculated with crude homogenate of unfed nymphs of the tick Rhipicephalus appendiculatus and with three semipurified fractions of the homogenate obtained by gel permeation chromatography, acquired a significant degree of immunity to infestation with adults of this tick. Fraction 2 induced the highest reduction (66%) in mean weight of engorged females followed by crude homogenate and fractions 1 and 3. Calves immunized with crude homogenates of unfed nymphs, fraction 2 of nymphal homogenate, and gut homogenate of unfed females also acquired immunity against adults of R.

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A gynandromorph specimen of Amblyomma hebraeum was found on a goat on which adult ticks were bred in the laboratory.

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Field collections of Amblyomma hebraeum Koch adults from six breeds of cattle were conducted on two farms in the Northern Transvaal. The density of A. hebraeum adults was highest on Simmentaler cows, followed by Santa gertrudis, Africaner, Bonsmara, Brahman and Nguni.

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