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1. Evolution of local recruitment and its consequences for marine populations

6. Parasites alter food-web topology of a subarctic lake food web and its pelagic and benthic compartments.

7. Parasite diversity at isolated, disturbed hydrothermal vents.

8. Evidence gaps and diversity among potential win-win solutions for conservation and human infectious disease control.

9. Schistosome infection in Senegal is associated with different spatial extents of risk and ecological drivers for Schistosoma haematobium and S. mansoni.

10. A food web including parasites for kelp forests of the Santa Barbara Channel, California.

11. Long-term change in the parasite burden of shore crabs ( Hemigrapsus oregonensis and Hemigrapsus nudus ) on the northwestern Pacific coast of North America.

12. High parasite diversity in the amphipod Gammarus lacustris in a subarctic lake.

13. Snail-Related Contributions from the Schistosomiasis Consortium for Operational Research and Evaluation Program Including Xenomonitoring, Focal Mollusciciding, Biological Control, and Modeling.

14. Hermaphrodites and parasitism: size-specific female reproduction drives infection by an ephemeral parasitic castrator.

15. Parasitic nematodes of marine fishes from Palmyra Atoll, East Indo-Pacific, including a new species of Spinitectus (Nematoda, Cystidicolidae).

16. Precision mapping of snail habitat provides a powerful indicator of human schistosomiasis transmission.

17. Parasitic copepods (Crustacea, Hexanauplia) on fishes from the lagoon flats of Palmyra Atoll, Central Pacific.

18. Parasite and host biomass and reproductive output in barnacle populations in the rocky intertidal zone.

19. Acanthocephalan Parasites of the Oarfish, Regalecus russelii (Regalecidae), With A Description of A New Species of Gymnorhadinorhynchus (Acanthocephala: Gymnorhadinorhynchidae).

20. Potential Biological Control of Schistosomiasis by Fishes in the Lower Senegal River Basin.

21. To Reduce the Global Burden of Human Schistosomiasis, Use 'Old Fashioned' Snail Control.

22. Monogenea of fishes from the lagoon flats of Palmyra Atoll in the Central Pacific.

23. Host density increases parasite recruitment but decreases host risk in a snail-trematode system.

24. Seroprevalence of Baylisascaris procyonis Infection among Humans, Santa Barbara County, California, USA, 2014-2016.

25. Nearly 400 million people are at higher risk of schistosomiasis because dams block the migration of snail-eating river prawns.

26. Predation on transmission stages reduces parasitism: sea anemones consume transmission stages of a barnacle parasite.

27. Molecular analyses reveal high species diversity of trematodes in a sub-Arctic lake.

28. Two's a crowd? Crowding effect in a parasitic castrator drives differences in reproductive resource allocation in single vs double infections.

29. Trematodes with a reproductive division of labour: heterophyids also have a soldier caste and early infections reveal how colonies become structured.

30. Global Assessment of Schistosomiasis Control Over the Past Century Shows Targeting the Snail Intermediate Host Works Best.

31. Independent origins of parasitism in Animalia.

33. Social Organization in Parasitic Flatworms--Four Additional Echinostomoid Trematodes Have a Soldier Caste and One Does Not.

34. ECOLOGICAL THEORY. A general consumer-resource population model.

35. Reduced transmission of human schistosomiasis after restoration of a native river prawn that preys on the snail intermediate host.

36. A synthetic workflow for coordinated direct observation and genetic tagging applied to a complex host-parasite interaction.

37. Monsters of the sea serpent: parasites of an oarfish, Regalecus russellii.

38. Infectious diseases affect marine fisheries and aquaculture economics.

39. Sapronosis: a distinctive type of infectious agent.

40. A lack of crowding? Body size does not decrease with density for two behavior-manipulating parasites.

41. Regulation of laboratory populations of snails (Biomphalaria and Bulinus spp.) by river prawns, Macrobrachium spp. (Decapoda, Palaemonidae): implications for control of schistosomiasis.

42. Does biodiversity protect humans against infectious disease?

43. New parasites and predators follow the introduction of two fish species to a subarctic lake: implications for food-web structure and functioning.

44. Ovicides paralithodis (Nemertea, Carcinonemertidae), a new species of symbiotic egg predator of the red king crab Paralithodes camtschaticus (Tilesius, 1815) (Decapoda, Anomura).

45. Parasites affect food web structure primarily through increased diversity and complexity.

46. Digenean metacercariae of fishes from the lagoon flats of Palmyra Atoll, Eastern Indo-Pacific.

48. The role of spatial and temporal heterogeneity and competition in structuring trematode communities in the great pond snail, Lymnaea stagnalis (L.).

49. A common scaling rule for abundance, energetics, and production of parasitic and free-living species.

50. Social organization in a flatworm: trematode parasites form soldier and reproductive castes.

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