Although much is known about factors which determine infection rates of salivarian trypanosomes (subgenera Nannomonas, Duttonella and Tryanozoon) in the tsetse fly Glossina, it is not clear why infection rates of Trypanozoon are high in mammalian hosts but low in wild-caught Glossina and why trypanosomiasis occurs where Glossina is not readily detectable. We report here that the feeding behaviour of trypanosome-infected Glossina differed from that of uninfected control flies. Infected flies probed more frequently and fed more voraciously. We describe a specific relationship between trypanosomes and the mechanoreceptors responsible for detecting the rate of blood flow, and show how infection affects that rate in the labrum. We suggest that the observed differences in feeding behaviour result from impaired function of the labral mechanoreceptors in infected Glossina.
An experimental investigation into flow through shaped gauze screens in two-dimensional and axisymmetric situations has shown that there is disagreement between measured velocity profiles and those computed from the method developed by Elder (1958). This disagreement has been shown to be attributable to the retention of a term of second order in the basic linearization and comparisons between experimental and theoretical profiles omitting this term are in good agreement.
A method is presented of designing very wide angle axisymmetric diffusing ducts which achieve uniform outlet velocity profiles. The aim was to concentrate the major part of the diffuser pressure rise on a small portion of the duct boundary with zero or favorable pressure gradients on the remainder of the boundary. With an optimum location and design of gauze the diffusers are capable of giving a very uniform outlet velocity profile in a short overall length, when working with thin inlet boundary layers and some, although recognizably moderate, pressure recovery. One diffuser tested (diffuser C) produced uniform outlet velocity profiles in approximately 1.5 inlet diameters compared with the 10 diameters required for a sudden enlargement having comparable performance.
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