Joseph Jourdane
University of Perpignan
52 Papers
829 Citations
Joseph Jourdane is an academic researcher from University of Perpignan. The author has contributed to research in topics: Schistosoma intercalatum & Schistosoma mansoni. The author has an hindex of 28, co-authored 51 publications. Previous affiliations of Joseph Jourdane include École pratique des hautes études & Centre national de la recherche scientifique.
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Papers
Biological control of the snail hosts of schistosomiasis in areas of low transmission: the example of the Caribbean area
TL;DR: The biological control of schistosomiasis has already proven its efficiency in several habitats in the Caribbean area and competitor snails have also proven to be useful in preventing the recolonization by the snail hosts after molluscicide treatments.
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Phylogeography and genetic divergence of some lymnaeid snails, intermediate hosts of human and animal fascioliasis with special reference to lymnaeids from the Bolivian Altiplano
Roula Jabbour-Zahab,Jean-Pierre Pointier,Joseph Jourdane,Philippe Jarne,J.A Oviedo,M. D. Bargues,Santiago Mas-Coma,René Angles,G Perera,C Balzan,K Khallayoune,François Renaud +11 more
TL;DR: The results strongly support the European origin of the lymnaeid snails from the Northern Bolivian Altiplano.
81
Adaptive sex allocation in a simultaneous hermaphrodite.
TL;DR: A hermaphroditic platyhelminth parasite, Echinostoma caproni, inhabits the small intestine of vertebrates, inevitably inducing the formation of highly subdivided populations, a condition known to promote local mate competition.
80
Recent studies on the reproductive biology of the schistosomes and their relevance to speciation in the Digenea.
TL;DR: It is suggested that site selection within the host and heterologous immunity may both reduce interspecific genetic interchange when digenean parasites utilise the same definitive host.
67
Selfing and outcrossing in a parasitic hermaphrodite helminth (Trematoda, Echinostomatidae)
TL;DR: Mating system polymorphism in the parasitic model is discussed in the context of the theories usually advanced by comparing the mother genotype with those of its progeny by using electrophoretic markers specific for three geographical isolates (strains) of Echinostoma caproni.