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Item type Location Call Number Status Date Due
E-Book E-Book AUM Main Library 577 (Browse Shelf) Not for loan

Global Perspectives on Vector-Borne Disease -- The Role of Global Climate Patterns in the Spatial and Temporal Distribution of Vector-Borne Disease -- The DDT Story: Environmentalism Over Rights to Health and Life -- Vector-Borne Diseases in the 21st Century: Counting Up or Counting Down? -- Emerging and Invasive Vector-Borne Diseases -- The Global Threat of Emergent/Re-emergent Vector-Borne Diseases -- The Need for Synergy and Value Creation in Contemporary Vector Research and Control -- “Dramas” Down-Under: Changes and Challenges in Australia -- Arboviruses and Their Control in the Field -- Novel Strategies to Control Aedes aegypti and Dengue -- Dengue Haemorrhagic Fever in Thailand: Current Incidence and Vector Management -- Using “Mulla’s Formula” to Estimate Percent Control -- Longitudinal Field Studies Will Guide a Paradigm Shift in Dengue Prevention -- Recombinant Bacterial Larvicides for Control of Important Mosquito Vectors of Disease -- Pest Management and Outreach in Disease Endemic Regions and in the United States: Practical, Novel and Attainable Strategies for Vector Control -- Current Prospects for the Control of the Vectors of Malaria and Filariasis -- Unraveling a Complex Transmission Cycle: Implications for Control -- Sustainable Mosquito Control in California: A Template for the World -- The Rhine Larviciding Program and Its Application to Vector Control -- Integrated Malaria Management -- Erratum.

The control of mosquitoes and other insect vectors of human pathogens in an area-wide, environmentally and sustainable way is critical to solving global health problems in the developing world but also to industrialized countries that already have in place efficient vector control programs. The rapid spread of West Nile virus through the United States provides one example of how even a highly developed country can be relatively powerless against the spread of mosquito-borne disease. This volume illustrates how the efforts over half a century of a single investigator, Mir S. Mulla, and his students and collaborators have achieved sustainable vector insect control in regions of the world extending from the south-western United States to south-east Asia. These control strategies have been refined over these decades and now are employed in a diversity of ecosystems. Increased public awareness of global health and the importance placed on this for the future well-being of the entire human population makes the deployment and refinement of these strategies even more timely.

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