Mostrando 4 resultados de: 4
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Publisher
American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene(1)
Frontiers in Marine Science(1)
Marine Policy(1)
Tropical Pinnipeds: Bio-Ecology, Threats and Conservation(1)
Cross-reactivity pattern of Asian and American human gnathostomiasis in Western Blot assays using crude antigens prepared from gnathostoma spinigerum and gnathostoma binucleatum third-stage larvae
ArticleAbstract: Gnathostomiasis is a zoonotic parasitosis endemic in many Asian and some Latin American countries. MPalabras claves:Autores:Bravo F., Doanh P.N., Gotuzzo H J.E., Horii Y., Jiménez P.J., José M. Ollague, Marti H., Nawa Y., Neumayr A., Nickel B., Norton S.A.Fuentes:scopusMitigating cetacean bycatch in coastal Ecuador: Governance challenges for small-scale fisheries
ArticleAbstract: Bycatch of marine fauna by small-scale (artisanal) fisheries is an important anthropogenic mortalityPalabras claves:Bycatch, Dolphins, ECUADOR, Fisheries governance, humpback whale, marine mammals, Small-scale fisheriesAutores:Carvajal R., Castro C., Jiménez P.J., José Alava J., José Barragán M., Judith Denkinger, Patricia Rosero, Samaniego J., Tatar B.Fuentes:scopusPersistent Organic Pollutants and Mercury in Genetically Identified Inner Estuary Bottlenose Dolphin (Tursiops truncatus) Residents of the Guayaquil Gulf, Ecuador: Ecotoxicological Science in Support of Pollutant Management and Cetacean Conservation
ArticleAbstract: The bottlenose dolphin is one of the most common cetaceans found in the coastal waters, estuaries, aPalabras claves:contaminants, Gulf of Guayaquil, mangroves, marine mammals, organic mercury, POPs, SOUTH AMERICA, toxicological risk assessmentAutores:Aguirre W.E., Ana Tirapé, Biedenbach G., Bossart G.D., Fair P.A., Gustavo A. Domínguez, Jiménez P.J., José Alava J., Lao W., Maruya K., Omar Alvarado-Cadena, Paola CalleFuentes:scopusPopulation status, anthropogenic stressors and conservation of the galapagos fur seal (Arctocephalus galapagoensis): An overview
Book PartAbstract: The Galapagos fur seal (Arctocephalus galapagoensis) is the smallest otariid of the world and a mariPalabras claves:Anthropogenic threats, Biological pollution, Canine distemper virus, Conservation, DDTs, Galapagos fur seal, Leptospira, PCBs, Persistent organic pollutants, population, virusesAutores:Carvajal R., Jiménez P.J., José Alava J., Judith Denkinger, Sandie K. SalazarFuentes:scopus