Impact of a freeway on the dispersal of ticks and Ixodes ricinus-borne pathogens: forested resting areas may become Lyme disease hotspots.

scientific article

Impact of a freeway on the dispersal of ticks and Ixodes ricinus-borne pathogens: forested resting areas may become Lyme disease hotspots. is …
instance of (P31):
scholarly articleQ13442814

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P356DOI10.1556/004.2017.024
P698PubMed publication ID28605964

P50authorMiklós GyuraneczQ43237701
Regina Hofmann-LehmannQ47452489
P2093author name stringSándor Hornok
Krisztina Szőke
Enikő Gönczi
Kinga M Sulyok
Maria Mulvihill
P275copyright licenseCreative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0 UnportedQ18810331
P6216copyright statuscopyrightedQ50423863
P433issue2
P921main subjectIxodes ricinusQ21175
Lyme diseaseQ201989
pathogen spreadQ50156634
P304page(s)242-252
P577publication date2017-06-01
P1433published inActa Veterinaria HungaricaQ15763638
P1476titleImpact of a freeway on the dispersal of ticks and Ixodes ricinus-borne pathogens: forested resting areas may become Lyme disease hotspots
P478volume65

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cites work (P2860)
Q64120733"Tekenscanner": a novel smartphone application for companion animal owners and veterinarians to engage in tick and tick-borne pathogen surveillance in the Netherlands
Q89586997Checklist of the hard tick (Acari: Ixodidae) fauna of Hungary with emphasis on host-associations and the emergence of Rhipicephalus sanguineus
Q42374490Evidence for host specificity of Theileria capreoli genotypes in cervids
Q91272220Landscape determinants of density of blacklegged ticks, vectors of Lyme disease, at the northern edge of their distribution in Canada

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