Author pages are created from data sourced from our academic publisher partnerships and public sources.
- Publications
- Influence
A Revision of Australian Recent and Tertiary Turritellidae (Gastropoda: Mollusca)
- T. A. Garrard
- Biology
- 24 March 1972
Abstract A description is given and comparisons made of all known recent species in the family Turritellidae from Australian waters. together with all known species from the Tertiary of Victorta.… Expand
Human strongyloidiasis: identifying knowledge gaps, with emphasis on environmental control
- M. Taylor, T. A. Garrard, Francis J. O’Donahoo, K. Ross
- Geography, Medicine
- Research and reports in tropical medicine
- 20 August 2014
Abstract Strongyloides is a human parasitic nematode that is poorly understood outside a clinical context. This article identifies gaps within the literature, with particular emphasis on gaps that… Expand
The National Strongyloides Working Group in Australia 10 workshops on: commendations and recommendations
- K. Ross, R. Bradbury, +7 authors R. Speare
- Medicine
- Australian and New Zealand journal of public…
- 1 June 2017
[Extract] Strongyloidiasis, caused by the intestinal helminth Strongyloides stercoralis, is commonly found in developing nations in tropical and subtropical regions. Strongyloidiasis was omitted by… Expand
A revision of Australian Architectonicidae (Gastropoda: Mollusca)
- T. A. Garrard
- Biology
- 31 October 1978
A revision of Australian Cancellariidae (Gastropoda: Mollusca)
- T. A. Garrard
- Biology
- 7 November 1975
A description is given and comparisons made, with both Recent and some Tertiary fossil species, of all known Recent species in the family Cancellariidae from Australian waters. Two species (1 new… Expand
Amendments to Iredale and McMichael’S “Reference List of the Marine Mollusca of New South Wales,” 1962
- T. A. Garrard
- Biology
- 1969
Simple solutions to Strongyloides stercoralis infection
- K. Ross, Francis J. O’Donahoo, T. A. Garrard, Michael J. C. Taylor
- Medicine
- BMJ
- 22 October 2013
Durrheim should be applauded for suggesting that an environmental, rather than clinical, intervention might be the key to controlling Strongyloides stercoralis .1 For too long we have taken a purely …
Biocontrol for environmental control of the human parasite, Strongyloides stercoralis: A necessary next step
- T. A. Garrard, K. Ross, Michael Taylor
- Biology
- 1 September 2016
Abstract Strongyloides stercoralis is a human parasitic nematode that infects 100–370 million people globally; prevalence comparable to malaria. Currently the primary treatment for strongyloidiasis… Expand
...
1
2
...