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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
311 Atherosclerotic Rat Model After a High-Fat, High-Sucrose Diet: Protective Role of Quercetin, O-Coumaric, and Berberine 2018
312 MORPHOLOGICAL STUDIES ON SOME SPECIES OF CEPHALOPODS (CUTTLEFISHES AND SQUIDS) FROM HURGHADA (RED SEA), EGYPT. 2018
313 Histological alterations in some organs of monosex tilapia (Oreochromis niloticus, Linnaeus, 1758) produced using methyltestosterone 2018
314 UVA-Induced DNA Damage and Apoptosis in Red Blood Cells of the African Catfish Clarias gariepinus 2018
315 CITRAL INDUCES SKELETAL ANOMALIES DURING
CHICK EMBRYO DEVELOPMENT
2018
316 Ameliorative role of camel whey protein and rosuvastatin on induced dyslipidemia in mice. 2018
317 Camel whey protein enhances lymphocyte survival by modulating
the expression of survivin, bim/bax, and cytochrome C and
restores heat stress-mediated pathological alteration in lymphoid
organs
2018
318 Atherosclerotic Rat Model After a High-Fat, High-Sucrose Diet: Protective Role of Quercetin, O-Coumaric, and Berberine 2018
319 Development and sexual dimorphism of the sonic system in three deep-sea neobythitine fishes and comparisons between upper mid and lower continental slope 2018
320 Bee venom improves diabetic wound healing by protecting functional macrophages from apoptosis and enhancing Nrf2, Ang-1 and Tie-2 signaling 2018