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A national atlas of tsetse and African animal trypanosomosis in Mali









Boucader Diarra, Modibo Diarra, Oumar Diall, Boubacar Bass, Youssouf Sanogo, Etienne Coulibaly, Mahamadou Sylla, Weining Zhao, Massimo Paone and Giuliano Cecchi (2019) A national atlas of tsetse and African animal trypanosomosis in Mali. Parasites & Vector. Vol. 12, pp. 466. doi: 10.1186/s13071-019-3721-3


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    Developing National Implementation Capacities for the Control of Tsetse and Animal African Trypanosomosis in Ethiopia - TCP/ETH/3702 2022
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    Livestock is an extremely important sector in Ethiopia. As a source of food, income and draft power, animal rearing provides livelihoods for 80 percent of the country’s rural population. The sector makes up about 20 percent of national gross domestic product (GDP) and 45 percent of the agricultural GDP. Despite its importance, the sector faces problems, and disease is one of the most significant. African Animal Trypanosomosis (AAT), which is transmitted by the tsetse fly, causes significant losses in the sector, both directly by contributing to animal deaths and low levels of production, and indirectly by reducing areas of cultivable land, which leads to land use imbalances, natural resource exploitation, and low levels of growth and diversification of crop-livestock production systems. For these reasons, AAT is a major threat to livelihoods and food security. In 2012, the Government of Ethiopia developed a national strategy for the control and eradication of tsetse and trypanosomosis (T&T), with the ultimate aim of enhancing mixed crop-livestock production systems to support both domestic and export demands for agricultural products. This, in turn, would contribute to food security and poverty reduction in the country.
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    Article
    The continental Atlas of tsetse and African animal trypanosomosis in Nigeria 2020
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    Tsetse-transmitted trypanosomosis remains a major animal health problem in Nigeria, in a context where changes in land cover, climate and control interventions are modifying its epidemiological patterns. Evidence-based decision making for the progressive control of the disease requires spatially-explicit information on its occurrence and prevalence, as well as on the distribution and abundance of the tsetse vector. The future development of a national Atlas of tsetse and AAT, relying on both published and unpublished information, could improve on the present review and provide further epidemiological evidence for decision making.
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    Book (stand-alone)
    Tsetse and Trypanosomosis Information 2014. PAAT Programme Against African Trypanosomosis Numbers 16966-17248 2015
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    The Tsetse and Trypanosomosis Information periodical has been established to collate and disseminate current information on all aspects of tsetse and Trypanosomosis research and control to institutions and individuals involved in the problems of African Trypanosomosis. The periodical is prepared for publication in both English and French.

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