- Heteroxeny, or
heteroxenous development,
characterizes a
parasite whose development involves several host species.
Heteroxeny has been used as the basis...
- (body)
because of
their cork****-like motion. Most
trypanosomes are
heteroxenous (requiring more than one
obligatory host to
complete life cycle) and...
- stage. The
majority are
monoxenous (infect one host only), but a few are
heteroxenous (lifecycle
involves two or more hosts). The
number of
families in this...
-
fungi have
heteroecious life cycles: In parasitology, heteroxeny, or
heteroxenous development, is a
synonymous term that
characterizes a
parasite whose...
- host,
while many
others are
heteroxenous: they live in more than one host
species over
their life cycle. This
heteroxenous life
cycle typically includes...
-
trypanosomatids some 400
million years ago.
After this divergence, a
heteroxenous lifestyle was developed, and most
Phytomonas species are transferred...
- the
outside of its host and
feeds on the host's blood. It can have a
heteroxenous lifestyle or
monoxenous life
cycle depending on how many
hosts it feeds...
- that
account is
still a very
useful source of
information today. The
heteroxenous (more than one
obligatory host)
lifecycle of
these apicomplexan parasites...
- in
oocyst (that is
without a sporocyst)
Sporozoites have
three walls Heteroxenous:
merogony and
gamogony occur in
vertebrate host, and
fertilization and...
- as
myxosporidia and microsporidia. Some of
these fish
parasites have
heteroxenous life
cycles (i.e. they have
several hosts)
among which sharks (certain...