Abdallah M. Samy
Name | Abdallah M. Samy |
---|---|
Position | Assistant Lecturer |
Affiliation | Entomology Department Faculty of Science Ain Shams University Abbassia 11566 Cairo Egypt |
samyasu(at)aol.com |
|
Remarks | research on sand flies, Leishmaniasis, arboviruses, disease modeling |
Last update | 13.03.2014 |
Publications of Abdallah M. Samy (7 listed):
Medical and Veterinary Entomology (2021) 35, 333-351
M. Okely, R. Anan, S. Gad-Allah and A.M. Samy (2021)
Hard ticks (Acari: Ixodidae) infesting domestic animals in Egypt: diagnostic characters and a taxonomic key to the collected species
Journal of Entomological Science (2020) 55, 25-37
Ahmed Tabbabi, Abdelghafar A. Alkishe, Abdallah M. Samy, Adel Rhim and A. Townsend Peterson (2020)
Malaria in North Africa: A review of the status of vectors and parasites
PLoS ONE (2018) 13 (12 - e0210122)
Mahmoud Kamal, Mohamed A. Kenawy, Magda Hassan Rady, Amany Soliman Khaled and Abdallah M. Samy (2018)
Mapping the global potential distributions of two arboviral vectors Aedes aegypti and Ae. albopictus under changing climate
Parasites and Vectors (2016) 9 (60) - Species composition of sand ...
Samia Boussaa, Kholoud Kahime, Abdallah M. Samy, Abdelkrim Ben Salem and Ali Boumezzough (2016)
Species composition of sand flies and bionomics of Phlebotomus papatasi and P. sergenti (Diptera: Psychodidae) in cutaneous leishmaniasis endemic foci, Morocco
Memórias do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz (2014) 109, 299-306
Abdallah Mohammed Samy, Said Abdallah Doha and Mohamed Amin Kenawy (2014)
Ecology of cutaneous leishmaniasis in Sinai: linking parasites, vectors and hosts
Memórias do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz (2010) 105, 850-856
Said Abdallah Doha and Abdallah M. Samy (2010)
Bionomics of phlebotomine sand flies (Diptera: Psychodidae) in the province of Al-Baha, Saudi Arabia
American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene (2009) 81, 213-218
Magdi G. Shehata, Abdallah M. Samy, Said A. Doha, Adel R. Fahmy, Rania M. Kaldas, Barry D. Furman and Jeffrey T. Villinski (2009)
First report of Leishmania tropica from a classical focus of L. major in North-Sinai, Egypt