Ticks and Tick-borne Diseases is an international, peer-reviewed scientific
journal that will appear quarterly. It publishes original research papers, short
communications, state-of-the-art mini-reviews, letters to the editor, clinical-case
studies, book reviews, announcements of pertinent international meetings, and
editorials.
The journal covers a broad spectrum and brings together various disciplines,
for example, zoology, microbiology, molecular biology, genetics, mathematical
modelling, veterinary and human medicine. Multidisciplinary approaches and the
use of conventional and novel methods/methodologies (in the field and in the
laboratory) are crucial for deeper understanding of the natural processes and
human behaviour/activities that result in human or animal diseases and in economic
effects of ticks and tick-borne pathogens. Such understanding is essential for
management of tick populations and tick-borne diseases in an effective and environmentally
acceptable manner. The journal covers the following topics:
Ticks: biosystematics/taxonomy, morphology, evolution, ecology, physiology/biochemistry,
behaviour, molecular biology, genomics/proteomics, and control
Ecology/ecoepidemiology of tick-borne diseases: vector ticks and reservoir
hosts, the mechanisms and processes determining their abundance and distribution,
the occurrence and prevalence of pathogens in tick and tick-host populations,
tick-host-pathogen interactions at the ecological level and their dependence
upon environmental factors, natural focality, and risk assessments of exposure
to ticks and the occurrence of tick-borne diseases
Tick-borne pathogens: viruses, bacteria, and parasites, their biology in
ticks and vertebrates, pathogen-tick and pathogen-host interactions on the molecular
and cellular levels, transmission, coinfection, genomics/proteomics, and biosystematics/taxonomy
Tick-borne diseases in domestic animals and wildlife: epidemiology, diagnosis,
immunology, treatment, vaccination, control/management, and economics
Tick-borne human diseases: epidemiology, diagnosis, immunology, treatment,
vaccination, socioeconomics, and public health
In addition, methodological papers on all these areas will be published as well
as timely reviews on vectors and vector-borne diseases in which tick biology
or tick-borne diseases are addressed.
Audience
Clinical microbiologists, Infection biologists, Immunologists, Virologists, Public health authorities, Veterinary scientists, Biologists/Zoologists with research focus on ticks and tick-borne pathogens
https://shop.elsevier.de/ticks-and-tick-borne-diseases-1877-959x.html137740Ticks and Tick-borne Diseaseshttps://shop.elsevier.de/media/catalog/product/1/8/1877-959x_1.jpg100100EURInStock/Revues28526128204 <p><br /><p><a href="http://www.elsevier.com/locate/ttbdis" alt="Ticks and Tick-borne Diseases" title="Ticks and Tick-borne Diseases"><img src="http://www.elsevier-data.de/journals/shop/journal-shop-button.jpg" border="0" /></a></p>
<h2>Aims and Scope </h2>
<p></p>
<p><i>Ticks and Tick-borne</i> Diseases is an international, peer-reviewed scientific
journal that will appear quarterly. It publishes original research papers, short
communications, state-of-the-art mini-reviews, letters to the editor, clinical-case
studies, book reviews, announcements of pertinent international meetings, and
editorials.<br />
The journal covers a broad spectrum and brings together various disciplines,
for example, zoology, microbiology, molecular biology, genetics, mathematical
modelling, veterinary and human medicine. Multidisciplinary approaches and the
use of conventional and novel methods/methodologies (in the field and in the
laboratory) are crucial for deeper understanding of the natural processes and
human behaviour/activities that result in human or animal diseases and in economic
effects of ticks and tick-borne pathogens. Such understanding is essential for
management of tick populations and tick-borne diseases in an effective and environmentally
acceptable manner. The journal covers the following topics:<br />
<br />
<b>Ticks:</b> biosystematics/taxonomy, morphology, evolution, ecology, physiology/biochemistry,
behaviour, molecular biology, genomics/proteomics, and control<br />
<b><br />
Ecology/ecoepidemiology of tick-borne diseases:</b> vector ticks and reservoir
hosts, the mechanisms and processes determining their abundance and distribution,
the occurrence and prevalence of pathogens in tick and tick-host populations,
tick-host-pathogen interactions at the ecological level and their dependence
upon environmental factors, natural focality, and risk assessments of exposure
to ticks and the occurrence of tick-borne diseases<br />
<b><br />
Tick-borne pathogens:</b> viruses, bacteria, and parasites, their biology in
ticks and vertebrates, pathogen-tick and pathogen-host interactions on the molecular
and cellular levels, transmission, coinfection, genomics/proteomics, and biosystematics/taxonomy<br />
<b><br />
Tick-borne diseases in domestic animals and wildlife:</b> epidemiology, diagnosis,
immunology, treatment, vaccination, control/management, and economics<br />
<b><br />
Tick-borne human diseases:</b> epidemiology, diagnosis, immunology, treatment,
vaccination, socioeconomics, and public health<br /><br />
In addition, methodological papers on all these areas will be published as well
as timely reviews on vectors and vector-borne diseases in which tick biology
or tick-borne diseases are addressed.</p>
<h2>Audience</h2>
<p>Clinical microbiologists, Infection biologists, Immunologists, Virologists, Public health authorities, Veterinary scientists, Biologists/Zoologists with research focus on ticks and tick-borne pathogens</p>EUR00137739Ticks and Tick-borne Diseases100100https://shop.elsevier.de/media/catalog/product/https://shop.elsevier.de/media/catalog/product/placeholder/default/generic_item_image_123x160_1_1.pngInStockPersonalDomestic1 Year1877-959XJOURNALUrban & Fischer Verlag/Elsevier GmbH1877-959Xjournalsjournalshttps://www.elsevier.com/journals/ticks-and-tick-borne-diseases/1877-959x/order-journalNeinNeinNeinNeinBitte auswählenBitte auswählenBitte auswählen