Healthy Butterflies:
Diseases & Prevention
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| Amanda's List: Starter Set for DIY Slides < NEW > Prevention and Management of Diseases of Insects < NEW > Chip's Tips < NEW > Using Meconia to Detect Infections Nuclear Polyhedrosis Monarch Disease Control Nosema What is OE? What do infected Monarchs look like? Predation : Ophryocystis elektroscirrha Insect Viruses Eggs & Egg Washing Technique Sterilization for disease prevention Insect Pathology Services at Mississippi State University Principles & Procedures for Rearing Quality Insects (MSU Workshop) Raising Healthy Butterflies IBBA 2005/6 Convention Presentation CD and 4 DVD set Amanda's List: Starter Set for DIY Slides This PDF document is an August 2006 quotation from Fisher Scientific, for items suggested by Amanda Lawrence as a starter kit for DIY slides. Amanda's own photographs of wet slides of nosema and O.e. can be seen in the document Prevention and Management of Diseases of Insects elsewhere on this page Prevention and Management of Diseases of Insects This paper, by Dr. Frank Davis and his research assistant Amanda Lawrence, teaches us how to start up a colony with disease-free livestock and how to recognize and prevent disease in our rearing operations. The photographs of wet slides of Nosema and O.e. were supplied by Amanda Lawrence. Livestock samples for the wet slide photos were donated by butterfly farmers for this project. Click HERE to view the document as a web page; or click here > Chip's Tips Advice from Dr. Orley Taylor of Monarch Watch, on O.e. and Nosema control. Click HERE. This paper describes "methods to use meconia for making smears to determine microbial infections in butterflies". The paper is highly recommended by IBBA Advisor Dr. Frank Davis.
A basic, layman's description of the NPV is provided, with microbiologist Amanda Lawrence's review and a slide of NPV provided by her. Click HERE.
Click HERE for more.
Nosema disease is caused by a single-celled protozoan parasite. Nosema species are intra-cellular parasites (microsporidians) of specific animals including butterflies. Click HERE for more.
Reproduced with permission from the Monarch Butterfly Parasites Webpage, University of Georgia Click HERE.
What do infected Monarchs look like? Reproduced with permission from the Monarch Butterfly Parasites Webpage, University of Georgia Click HERE.
Predation : Ophryocystis elektroscirrha Article reproduced from Monarch Watch website, with permission. Click HERE.
Information reproduced from Cornell University website, with permission. Click HERE.
A method for washing butterfly eggs. Click HERE.
Sterilization for disease prevention
Information about sterilization methods and practices that result in clean livestock being released to the environment.
Click HERE.
Insect Pathology Services at Mississippi State University Dr. Frank Davis' staff at Mississippi State University offer an insect pathology service that will identify disease organisms and microbes. Click HERE for details.
Insect Rearing Workshops at Mississippi State University: The next Insect Rearing Workshop will be held 1-6 October 2006. It will begin on Sunday afternoon and continue through noon on Friday. The program will consist of a series of lectures delivered by expert instructors. Click HERE for details.
Raising Healthy Butterflies Click HERE. |
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