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Examples

  • Vector-borne diseases such as malaria, dengue, trypanosomiasis and others will spread rapidly causing large scale deaths in Africa.

    Alemayehu G. Mariam: The Toxic Ecology of African Dictatorships 2009

  • Vector-borne diseases, such as malaria, dengue fever, schistosomiasis, and chagas disease, could expand their ranges as temperature and rainfall patterns change.

    Environmental change and socioeconomic factors in Africa 2008

  • Vector-borne diseases such as malaria and dengue fever could become more widespread if effective control measures are not in place.

    Archive 2006-10-01 2006

  • Vector-borne diseases such as malaria and dengue fever could become more widespread if effective control measures are not in place.

    U.K. Government Warning on Climate Change 2006

  • Vector-borne disease control in humans through rice-agroecosystem management.

    Chapter 15 1996

  • Topic A (Vector-borne diseases of relevance to agriculture) provides a small reference slide collection showing the magnitude, distribution and symptoms of vector-borne diseases.

    1. Target audience, objectives, scope and structure 1996

  • CopyrightsPreface - About PEEM - AcknowledgementsIntroductionGlossaryTopic A: Vector-borne diseases of relevance to agricultureTopic B: Relevant disease vectorsTopic C: Vector habitatsTopic D: Disease transmission, with special reference to schistosomiasisTopic E: Land use, vegetation and cropsTopic F: Water use in agricultureTopic G: Cultivation practicesTopic H: Influence of livestockTopic J: Plant protection, pest control and chemical inputsTopic K: Rural settlementsBibliographySlide Set SeriesSlide Set Series

    Chapter 16 1996

  • The information collected for and generated by the 7th PEEM meeting was published in the FAO publication Effects of Agricultural Development on Vector-borne Diseases (AGL/MISC/12/87).

    Chapter 2 1996

  • Vector-borne disease issues include water bodies used by cattle, human-livestock-vector contact patterns, livestock in the domestic environment and the potential for zooprophylaxis (all covered in section H).

    Chapter 11 1996

  • CopyrightsPreface - About PEEM - AcknowledgementsIntroductionGlossaryTopic A: Vector-borne diseases of relevance to agricultureTopic B: Relevant disease vectorsTopic C: Vector habitatsTopic D: Disease transmission, with special reference to schistosomiasisTopic E: Land use, vegetation and cropsTopic F: Water use in agricultureTopic G: Cultivation practicesTopic H: Influence of livestockTopic J: Plant protection, pest control and chemical inputsTopic K: Rural settlementsBibliographySlide Set SeriesGlossary

    Chapter 4 1996

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