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named it Plasmodium odocoilei. But no one had reported it again until Ellen Martinsen of the Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute in Washington, cheap Authentic jordans , D.C., cheap jordans free shipping , and her colleagues accidentally rediscovered it, cheap jordans for sale . Their find dashes the current belief that no mammals other than people in the Western Hemisphere carry their own native forms of malaria, cheap wholesale jordans , Martinsen and her colleagues say in the Feb. 5 Science Advances. And the work also challenges the conventional wisdom that no members of the deer family anywhere have their own malaria parasites, cheap air jordans . “I feel a bit discombobulated by the paper,” says Penn State evolutionary parasitologist Andrew Read. According to the new paper, cheap jordans , the parasite is found in 25 percent of white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) sampled at some locations. “How could anybody have missed malaria at these levels?” he says. The parasite has so far appeared at very low concentrations in animals’ blood, cheap jordans online , but Read is now wondering what other forms of malaria biologists have overlooked. The old report of a deer parasite had been “really just a mystery, cheap real jordans ,” Martinsen says. It came from a leading malaria parasite expert and so was difficult to dismiss lightly. But Martinsen wasn’t even thinking about it when she and Robert Fleischer were using genetic methods to survey for bird malaria parasites in mosquitoes at the Smithsonian’s National Zoo in Washington, D.C.? A peculiar sample of malaria-parasite DNA turned up in a mosquito that had bitten a white-tailed http://boardsiriometin...Thread&threadID=82966 http://www.koniecligi....hread.php?thread_id=10477 http://www.knorretty.c...thread.php?thread_id=4822 |