I (Sundar) think that Dr. William Kirby is the Father of Entomology.
Parasitology is the study of parasites and their relationships with their hosts. Its branches include medical parasitology, which focuses on parasites that cause human diseases, veterinary parasitology, which studies parasites that affect animals, and ecological parasitology, which looks at the interactions between parasites and their hosts in natural ecosystems.
PARASITOLOGY
People who study parasites are typically scientists or researchers with backgrounds in fields such as parasitology, biology, veterinary medicine, or public health. They are interested in understanding the biology, ecology, and impact of parasites on their hosts and ecosystems.
Parasitology is the study of parasites, their hosts, and the relationship between them. As a biological discipline, the scope of parasitology is not determined by the organism or environment in question, but by their way of life. This means it forms a synthesis of other disciplines, and draws on techniques from fields such as cell biology, bioinformatics, biochemistry, molecular biology, immunology, genetics, evolution and ecology.
Veterinary bioscience typically focuses on the study of diseases and healthcare in animals. Animal and veterinary bioscience, on the other hand, encompasses a broader range of topics including animal behavior, nutrition, genetics, and welfare in addition to veterinary sciences.
Margaret W. Sloss has written: 'Veterinary clinical parasitology' -- subject(s): Diagnosis, Veterinary clinical parasitology, Veterinary medicine, Veterinary parasitology
Omar O. Barriga has written: 'Veterinary Parasitology' 'Veterinary parasitology for practitioners'
Reginald H. Smythe has written: 'Veterinary parasitology' -- subject(s): Veterinary parasitology 'Shih Tzu'
Charles James Price has written: 'Practical parasitology: general laboratory techniques and parasitic protozoa' -- subject(s): Laboratory manuals, Veterinary parasitology
Parasitology is the study of parasites and their relationships with their hosts. Its branches include medical parasitology, which focuses on parasites that cause human diseases, veterinary parasitology, which studies parasites that affect animals, and ecological parasitology, which looks at the interactions between parasites and their hosts in natural ecosystems.
E. J. L. Soulsby has written: 'Textbook of veterinary clinical parasitology'
V. S. Ershov has written: 'Parasitology and parasitic diseases of livestock' -- subject(s): Domestic animals, Parasites, Parasitic diseases, Veterinary, Veterinary medicine
J. F. Williams has written: 'Diagnosis of gastrointestinal parasitism in dogs and cats' -- subject(s): Cats, Diagnosis, Diseases, Dogs, Veterinary gastroenterology, Veterinary parasitology
Uly Matzigkeit has written: 'Natural veterinary medicine' -- subject(s): Biological control, Parasites, Livestock, Veterinary parasitology, Pests, Pesticidal plants, Cattle, Botanical insecticides
Sushruta
The correct spelling is "parasitology" (study of parasites).
PARASITOLOGY