- Source: Helminthology
Helminthology is the study of parasitic worms (helminths). The field studies the taxonomy of helminths and their effects on their hosts.
The origin of the first compound of the word is the Greek ἕλμινς - helmins, meaning "worm".
In the 18th and early 19th century there was wave of publications on helminthology; this period has been described as the science's "Golden Era". During that period the authors Félix Dujardin, William Blaxland Benham, Peter Simon Pallas, Marcus Elieser Bloch, Otto Friedrich Müller, Johann Goeze, Friedrich Zenker, Charles Wardell Stiles, Carl Asmund Rudolphi, Otto Friedrich Bernhard von Linstow
and Johann Gottfried Bremser started systematic scientific studies of the subject.
The Japanese parasitologist Satyu Yamaguti was one of the most active helminthologists of the 20th century; he wrote the six-volume Systema Helminthum.
See also
Nematology
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Kudis
- Taenia (cacing pita)
- Trichuris
- Hymenolepididae
- Leishmania donovani
- Dracunculiasis
- Trulek gelambir-merah
- Helminthology
- Worm
- Journal of Helminthology
- Giovanni Battista Grassi
- Karl Rudolphi
- Veterinary parasitology
- Konstantin Skryabin
- Outline of academic disciplines
- Neopodocotyle
- Margarita Bravo Hollis