1996
DOI: 10.1093/jmedent/33.4.586
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In Vivo Rearing and Development of Wohlfahrtia magnifica (Diptera: Sarcophagidae)

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Cited by 10 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…The stable fly, S. calcitrans, was obtained as pupae from the Novartis Centre de Recherche Sante Animale, Switzerland. The flesh fly, W. magnifica, was reared at the University of Granada, Spain, and sent to the Netherlands as pupae (Soler Cruz et al, 1996). The sheep head fly, Hy.…”
Section: Insectsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The stable fly, S. calcitrans, was obtained as pupae from the Novartis Centre de Recherche Sante Animale, Switzerland. The flesh fly, W. magnifica, was reared at the University of Granada, Spain, and sent to the Netherlands as pupae (Soler Cruz et al, 1996). The sheep head fly, Hy.…”
Section: Insectsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It was observed that larvae that originated from a single gravid female did not necessarily develop at the same rate in the same diet -a range of sizes was seen. Third stage larvae Cruz et al, 1996). yLarvae deposited by females were not counted during the larval development.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Whatever factors were involved, the result was that from the second stage the larvae developed more slowly and to a smaller final size in the diets than in living tissues. Thus, larval development took longer in the diets (8-11 days) than in live hosts, where the larvae can complete their development within 4-8 days (Portschinsky, 1916;Hadani et al, , 19, 22-26 1971;Ruiz Martinez et al, 1992;Soler Cruz et al, 1996). In addition, the mean weights of puparia from diets (38.7-59.3 mg, Table 2) was much lower than that from naturally infested animals (92.2 mg AE 24.8 SD), indicating that the majority of diet-fed larvae had not grown to their full potential when they pupariated.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Until today, most research on W. magnifica has focused on epidemiological studies (Ruiz Martínez et al, 1993), morphological observations (Li et al, 2020; Szpila et al, 2014; Yasuda, 1940), and investigation of life history (Cruz et al, 1996), while little is known about the host's immune response, parasite–host interaction, or regulatory mechanisms on the level of molecular biology. A high‐quality genome is a fundamental resource for understanding many aspects of the developmental and reproductive biology, physiology and biochemistry as well as complex pathogenic mechanisms of W. magnifica or for developing novel control methods preventing fly invasion to livestock.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%