Publication | Closed Access
Abdominal dropsy disease in major carps of Meghalaya: Isolation and characterization of Aeromonas hydrophila
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2005
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Unknown Venue
Fossil Insect FamilyEntomologyCurrent ScienceAnatomyMyriapodaArthropod TaxonomyPhylogeneticsAquacultureFish ImmunologyMajor CarpsParasitologyMorphological EvidenceMorphologyInsect BodyBiologyInsect BiomechanicsNatural SciencesEvolutionary BiologyAeromonas HydrophilaMicrobiologyAbdominal Dropsy DiseaseMedicine
CURRENT SCIENCE, VOL. 88, NO. 12, 25 JUNE 2005 1897 It provides an important link in the evolution of insects. The morphological characters of the reported bug, such as small body, short antennae comprising three segments, three-segmented, backwardly directed rostrum with thorax being the largest among the three parts of the insect body, are not yet known in a living or fossil insect family. It also throws light on the biodiversity of the late Quaternary about which our knowledge is still poor.
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