Search

Your search keyword '"human landing catch"' showing total 12 results

Search Constraints

Start Over You searched for: Descriptor "human landing catch" Remove constraint Descriptor: "human landing catch" Journal malaria journal Remove constraint Journal: malaria journal
12 results on '"human landing catch"'

Search Results

1. Composition of Anopheles species and bionomic characteristics over the peak malaria transmission season in Bandarban, Bangladesh

2. Composition of Anopheles species and bionomic characteristics over the peak malaria transmission season in Bandarban, Bangladesh.

3. Anopheline diversity in urban and peri-urban malaria foci: comparison between alternative traps and seasonal effects in a city in the Western Brazilian Amazon

4. Anopheline diversity in urban and peri-urban malaria foci: comparison between alternative traps and seasonal effects in a city in the Western Brazilian Amazon.

5. Indoor and outdoor malaria transmission in two ecological settings in rural Mali: implications for vector control

6. Mosquito electrocuting traps for directly measuring biting rates and host-preferences of Anopheles arabiensis and Anopheles funestus outdoors

7. Indoor and outdoor malaria transmission in two ecological settings in rural Mali: implications for vector control.

8. Development and evaluation of mosquito-electrocuting traps as alternatives to the human landing catch technique for sampling host-seeking malaria vectors.

9. Implications for changes in Anopheles darlingi biting behaviour in three communities in the peri Iquitos region of Amazonian Peru.

10. Applications and limitations of Centers for Disease Control and Prevention miniature light traps for measuring biting densities of African malaria vector populations: a pooled-analysis of 13 comparisons with human landing catches.

11. Standardizing operational vector sampling techniques for measuring malaria transmission intensity: evaluation of six mosquito collection methods in western Kenya.

12. Mosquito electrocuting traps for directly measuring biting rates and host-preferences of Anopheles arabiensis and Anopheles funestus outdoors.

Catalog

Books, media, physical & digital resources