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Zoology & Entomology Department

Researches:

Different research programs have been carried out in the department of Zoology and Entomology in all areas including short-term and long-term projects. These include ecological and biological studies on the marine and freshwater ecosystems, the effect of water pollution on the Nile fauna, biological and taxonomical and fisheries studies on the Nile and Red Sea fishes. Moreover, a continuous work on stock assessment of fishes of the Nile and Red Sea has been established ten years ago and still in execution. Also modeling of the aquatic ecosystems of the Egyptian lakes, especially Lake Nasser is an important task of Fish Biology Group. Similar projects are carried out with respect to Entomological fields, especially those associated with our protected areas in Assiut and to animal parasites and their economic effects.

 

# Title Research Year
981 Metabolic and histological studies on the effect of garlic administration on the carnivorous fish Chrysichthys auratus 2003
982 Aluminium toxicity in rats: The of the tannic acid as antioxidant, 2003
983 A role for ecdysteroids in phase polymorphism of the desert locust. 2003
984 Ultrastructural studies on external genitalia of the different casts of vespa orientalis (Hymonopera: Vespidae) 2003
985 Some antioxidants activities, lipid peroxide and nitric oxide levels in follicular fluid and its relation to oocyte quality in buffalo-cows 2003
986 Comparative histological studies on the cerebellum of the duck Anas domesticus and the dove Streptopelia senegalensis. 2002
987 Efficiacy of diethyldithiocarbomate (DDTC) and diethylenettriamine pentacetic acid (DTPA) on long-term cadmium chloride toxicity in rats 2002
988 Effect of some ecological factors and heavy metals on the common terrestrial isopod Porcellionides pruniosus (Oniscoidea:Porcellionidae) in Assiut, Egypt 2002
989
More quickly because it has less surface of resistance to the fluid. In a like manner, planktonic organisms have evolved various flattened body shapes or appendages. Even more common than changes in body shape is the development of various spines and bo
2002
990 Ultrastructural and histochemical studies on the caeca of the palm dove Streptopelia senegalensis. 2002