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Publications

View citations of publications by National Wildlife Health Center scientists since our founding in 1975.  Access to full-text is provided where possible.

Filter Total Items: 1613

Quarterly Wildlife Mortality Report

No abstract available.
Authors
K. A. Converse, R. Windingstad, K. Roertgen, T. Roffe

Quarterly Wildlife Mortality Report

No abstract available.
Authors
K. A. Converse, R. Windingstad, K. Roertgen, T. Roffe

Avulsion of the brachial plexus in a great horned owl (Bubo virginaus)

Avulsion of the brachial plexus was documented in a Great Horned Owl (Bubo virginianus). A fractured scapula was also present. Cause of these injuries was not known but was thought to be due to trauma. Differentiation of musculoskeletal injury from peripheral nerve damage can be difficult in raptors. Use of electromyography and motor nerve conduction velocity was helpful in demonstrating periphera
Authors
M.P. Moore, E. Stauber, N. J. Thomas

Sightability adjustment methods for aerial surveys of wildlife populations

Aerial surveys are routinely conducted to estimate the abundance of wildlife species and the rate of population change. However, sightability of animal groups is acknowledged as a significant source of bias in these estimates. Recent research has focused on the development of sightability models to predict the probability of sighting groups under various conditions. Given such models, we show how
Authors
R.K. Steinhorst, M. D. Samuel

Chlamydial infections in free-living birds

Most studies of chlamydial infections in free-living wild birds have been limited to surveys for the presence of Chlamydia psittaci or antibody to C psittaci and have largely been done in association with the identification of chlamydiosis in human beings, commercial fowl, or pet birds. The emphasis of these studies has been to determine the prevalence of infection and the potential role of wild b
Authors
C. J. Brand

Presumed drowning of Aleutian Canada geese on the Pacific coast of California and Oregon

Carcasses of 42 and 17 Aleutian Canada geese (Branta canadensis leucopareia), a federally listed endangered species, were found on ocean beaches near Crescent City, California, and near Pacific City, Oregon, respectively, following severe storms. Necropsies and other information suggest that the birds were flushed during the storms and somehow entered the water where they were washed into the surf
Authors
Paul F. Springer, Roy W. Lowe, Richard K. Stroud, Patricia A. Gullett

Fusarium mycotoxins from peanuts suspected as a cause of sandhill crane mortality

An estimated 9,500 sandhill cranes (Grus canadensis) died in Gaines County, Texas and Roosevelt County, New Mexico between 1982 and 1987. The predominant clinical sign observed in sick cranes was their inability to hold their heads erect, both while standing and flying. Multiple muscle hemorrhages and submandibular edema were the most common lesions seen at necropsy. Mycotoxins produced by Fusariu
Authors
Ronald M. Windingstad, Richard J. Cole, Paul E. Nelson, Thomas J. Roffe, Ronnie R. George, Joe W. Dorner

Microcontaminants and reproductive impairment of the Forster's tern on Green Bay, Lake Michigan,1983

For the 1983 nesting season, Forster's tern (Sterna forsteri) reproductive success was significantly impaired on organochlorine contaminated Green Bay, Lake Michigan compared to a relatively uncontaminated inland location at Lake Poygan, Wisconsin. Compared with tern eggs from Lake Poygan, eggs from Green Bay had significantly higher median concentrations of 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (TC
Authors
T.J. Kubiak, H.J. Harris, L.M. Smith, T.R. Schwartz, D.L. Stalling, J.A. Trick, L. Sileo, D. E. Docherty, T.C. Erdman

Avian botulism: geographic expansion of a historic disease

Avian botulism is a paralytic, often fatal disease of birds resulting from ingestion of toxin produced by the bacterium Clostridium botulinum. Waterfowl die-offs from the botulism are usually caused by type C toxin; sporadic die-offs among fish-eating birds, such as common loons (Gavia immer) and gulls, have been caused by type E toxin.
Authors
Louis N. Locke, Milton Friend

Isolation and identification of trichothecenes from Fusarium compactum suspected in the aetiology of a major intoxication of sandhill cranes

Isoneosolaniol (4,8-diacetoxy-12,13-epoxytrichothec-9-ene-3,15-diol) and other unidentified trichothecene mycotoxins were isolated from culture extracts of two highly toxigenic strains of Fusarium compactum cultured from waste peanuts involved in an acute intoxication of sandhill cranes (Grus canadensis). Neosolaniol and other unidentified trichothecenes were detected in waste peanuts collected fr
Authors
Richard J. Cole, Joe W. Dorner, John Gilbert, David N. Mortimer, Colin Crews, J.C. Mitchell, Ronald M. Windingstad, Paul E. Nelson, Horace G. Cutler

Ducks Get Sick Too!

When it comes to getting sick, wild waterfowl—which include ducks, geese, and swans—are a lot like people. We are all vulnerable to a wide variety of diseases.Some diseases that affect waterfowl, such as avian botulism, have been recognized for many decades as a major cause of death. Others, such as duck plague, are relative newcomers to the known roster of waterfowl diseases.Unfortunately, the nu
Authors
Ronald M. Windingstad, Cynthia J. Laitman

Eustrongylides sp. epizootic in young common egrets (Casmerodius albus)

In May 1985, epizootic mortality was reported in common egrets (Casmerodius albus) on Avery Island, Louisiana. Subsequent investigation revealed that more than 400 birds died. Severe peritoneal nematodiasis (Eustrongylides sp.) was found on postmortem examination. A nearby breeding rookery on the same island was apparently unaffected. Reasons for this selective mortality are presented. Three other
Authors
Thomas J. Roffe