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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

DDT poisoning in a Cooper's hawk collected in 1980

In April 1980, a Cooper's hawk (Accipiter cooperii) was found on the ground in Lakewood, Colorado, unable to fly and in convulsion. The bird died shortly thereafter. The hawk was packed in dry ice and shipped air express to the Fish and Wildlife Service, U. S. Department of the Interior, National Wildlife Health Laboratory, Madison, Wisconsin, for necropsy. Following necropsy, the brain, gastroint
Authors
Richard M. Prouty, Oliver H. Pattee, Shelia K. Schmeling

Aversion substance(s) of the rat coagulating glands

The aversive substance(s) present in adult male urine were not found in castrate rat urine. Removal of the coagulating glands also resulted in a loss of the aversion compounds. The aversion substances were restored to the urine after androgen treatment of the castrate rats.
Authors
Anthony M. Gawienowski, Iver J. Berry, James J. Kennelly

A study of gizzard nematodes and renal coccidiosis in Canada geese (Branta canadensis interior) of the Mississippi Valley population

A total of 309 Mississippi Valley Population Canada geese, Branta canadensis interior, of different sex and age groups was collected from three locations in the Mississippi Flyway from 1979-1981 and examined for gizzard nematodes and renal coccidia. Three species of nematodes were removed from the gizzards, Amidostomum anseris, A. spatulatum, and Epomidiostomum crami. The latter two species are re
Authors
Benjamin N. Tuggle

[Book review] Diseases of Wild Waterfowl, by Gary A. Wobeser

Review of: Diseases of wild waterfowl. Gary A. Wobeser. Plenum Press, 1981. ISBN: 0306407469. 300 p.
Authors
M. Friend

Bibliography of references to avian botulism: Update

This bibliography, first compiled in 1970 (Allen and Wilson 1977) and published in 1977 in response to many requests for information on avian botulism, has been updated to include the literature published through 1980.In general, only articles dealing primarily with the avian disease are included, as opposed to those concerned with the various aspects of the biology of Clostridium botulinum, eithe
Authors
Sonoma S. Wilson, Louis N. Locke

Food of the Pacific white-sided dolphin, Lagenorhynchus obliquidens, Dall's porpoise, Phocoenoides dalli, and northern fur seal, Callorhinus ursinus, off California and Washington

Our knowledge of the feeding habits of the Pacific white-sided dolphin, Lagenorhynchus obliquidens, and the Dall's porpoise, Phocoenoides dalli, is based on examination of the stomach contents of stranded animals, animals accidentally taken in commercial fishing gear, those taken in the western Pacific commercial fishery, and animals that died during capture attempts. Of these only a few were norm
Authors
Richard K. Stroud, Clifford H. Fiscus, Hiroshi Kajimura

An overview of the National Wildlife Health Laboratory after 6 years

No abstract available.
Authors
Lynne M. Siegfried, Milton Friend

Duck virus enteritis (duck plague): Since Lake Andes

No abstract available.
Authors
Christopher J. Brand

Key to trematodes reported in waterfowl

This key is the second in a series for identification of the helminths reported in waterfowl (Family Anatidae, Order Anseriformes). The first was a key to nematodes (McDonald 1974). The trematodes show the greatest variety of forms among the helminth parasites of waterfowl, including over half of all species reported; sometimes this group also includes the greatest part of the worms in a single bi
Authors
Malcolm Edwin McDonald

Whooping crane preyed upon by golden eagle

The Golden Eagle (Aquila chrysaetos) is the largest predatory bird in North America and is well known for its predatory abilities. Attacks have been reported on mammals such as whitetail jackrabbits (Lepus townsendi) (McGahan 1967, J. Wildl. Mgmt. 31: 496), pronghorn antelope (Antilocapra americana) (Bruhns 1970, Can. Field-Natur. 84: 301), Mallards (Anas platyrhynchos) (Kelleher and O'Malia 1971,
Authors
Ronald M. Windingstad, Harry E. Stiles, Roderick C. Drewien

An outbreak of duck virus enteritis (duck plague) in a captive flock of mixed waterfowl

An outbreak of duck virus enteritis occurred in a flock of captive waterfowl composed of mallards (Anas platyrhynchos), black ducks (Anas rubripes), and Canada geese (Branta canadensis). Although all three species were housed together, morbidity and mortality were confined to the 227 black ducks and Canada geese, of which 180 died and the rest were left in a weakened condition. Lesions are given f
Authors
Roy D. Montgomery, George Stein, Meliton N. Novilla, Sarah S. Hurley, Robert J. Fink