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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: 1614

Bacteremia in free-ranging Hawaiian green turtles, Chelonia mydas, with fibropapillomatosis

Past studies of free-ranging green turtles Chelonia mydas with fibropapillomatosis (FP) in Hawaii have shown that animals become immunosuppressed with increasing severity of this disease. Additionally, preliminary clinical examination of moribund turtles with FP revealed that some animals were also bacteraemic. We tested the hypothesis that bacteraemia in sea turtles is associated with the severit
Authors
Thierry M. Work, G.H. Balazs, M. Wolcott, Robert Morris

Characterization of Pasteurella multocida isolates from wetland ecosystems during 1996 to 1999

We cultured 126 Pasteurella multocida isolates, 92 from water and 34 from sediment samples collected from wetlands in the Pacific and Central flyways of the United States between 1996 and 1999. Most (121) of the isolates were P. multocida serotype 1, but serotypes 3, 3/4, 10, and 11 were also found. Many (82) of the isolates were further characterized by DNA fingerprinting procedures and tested in
Authors
M. D. Samuel, D.J. Shadduck, Diana R. Goldberg, M. A. Wilson, D.O. Joly, M. A. Lehr

Protozoal and epitheliocystis-like infections in the introduced bluestripe snapper (Lutjanus kasmira) in Hawaii

The bluestripe snapper, or taape, was introduced into Hawaii in the 1950s and has since become very abundant throughout the archipelago. As part of a health survey of reef fish in Hawaii, we necropsied 120 taape collected from various coastal areas south of Oahu and examined fish histology for extraintestinal organisms. Forty-seven percent of taape were infected with an apicomplexan protozoan comp
Authors
Thierry M. Work, Robert Rameyer, Geraldine Takata, Michael L. Kent

Prevalence of skeletal and eye malformations in frogs from north-central United States: estimations based on collections from randomly selected sites

Skeletal malformation rates for several frog species were determined in a set of randomly selected wetlands in the north-central USA over three consecutive years. In 1998, 62 sites yielded 389 metamorphic frogs, nine (2.3%) of which had skeletal or eye malformations. A subset of the original sites was surveyed in the following 2 yr. In 1999, 1,085 metamorphic frogs were collected from 36 sites and
Authors
P.K. Schoff, C.M. Johnson, A.M. Schotthoefer, J.E. Murphy, C. Lieske, Rebecca A. Cole, L.B. Johnson, V.R. Beasley

Relationship of tadpole stage to location of echinostome cercaria encystment and the consequences for tadpole survival

The effect of echinostome infections on the survival of Rana pipiens tadpoles was examined in relation to developmental stage of tadpoles. Individual tadpoles of Gosner stages 25, 27, 32–33, and 37–39 were exposed to 1 of 4 levels of cercariae (0, 20, 50, or 100). Only tadpoles at stage 25, the earliest stage infected, died within a 5-day experimental period. This stage-specific mortality rate cou
Authors
A.M. Schotthoefer, Rebecca A. Cole, V.R. Beasley

Type A influenza virus surveillance in free-flying, nonmigratory ducks residing on the eastern shore of Maryland

Virus surveillance in free-flying, nonmigratory ducks living on the eastern shore of Maryland indicated that influenza A viruses were introduced into the area or that the prevalence of endemic infections increased between July 15 and August 27, 1998. Cloacal swabs collected between May 28 and July 15, 1998, were negative for influenza A virus recovery (0/233), whereas 13.9% (29/209) of swabs colle
Authors
R.D. Slemons, W. R. Hansen, K. A. Converse, D.A. Senne

Canis mesomelas

No abstract available.
Authors
L.R. Walton, D.O. Joly

Chronic wasting disease in free-ranging Wisconsin white-tailed deer

Three White-tailed Deer shot within 5 km during the 2001 hunting season in Wisconsin tested positive for chronic wasting disease, a prion disease of cervids. Subsequent sampling within 18 km showed a 3% prevalence (n=476). This discovery represents an important range extension for chronic wasting disease into the eastern United States.
Authors
D.O. Joly, C. A. Ribic, J.A. Langenberg, K. Beheler, C.A. Batha, B.J. Dhuey, R.E. Rolley, G. Bartelt, T.R. VanDeelen, M. D. Samuel

An adenovirus associated with intestinal impaction and mortality of male common eiders (Somateria mollissima) in the Baltic Sea

We examined 10 common eider (Somateria mollissima) males found dead in 1998 during a die-off in the northern Baltic Sea off the southwestern coast of Finland. We diagnosed impaction of the posterior small intestine with mucosal necrosis as the cause of death in all 10 and isolated adenoviruses from cloacal samples of six birds. The adenovirus isolates were not neutralized by reference antisera to
Authors
Tuula E. Hollmén, J. Christian Franson, Mikael Kilpi, Douglas E. Docherty, V. Myllys

Avian cholera in Southern Great Petrel (Macronectes giganteus) from Antarctica

A southern giant petrel (Macronectes giganteus) was found dead at Potter Peninsula, King George Island, South Shetland, Antarctica. The adult male was discovered approximately 48 hr after death. Macroscopic and microscopic lesions were compatible with avian cholera and the bacterium Pasteurella multocida subsp. gallicida, serotype A1 was isolated from lung, heart, liver, pericardial sac, and air s
Authors
G. A. Leotta, M. Rivas, I. Chinen, G. B. Vigo, F.A. Moredo, N. Coria, M. J. Wolcott

Recombinant raccoon pox vaccine protects mice against lethal plague

Using a raccoon poxvirus (RCN) expression system, we have developed new recombinant vaccines that can protect mice against lethal plague infection. We tested the effects of a translation enhancer (EMCV-IRES) in combination with a secretory (tPA) signal or secretory (tPA) and membrane anchoring (CHV-gG) signals on in vitro antigen expression of F1 antigen in tissue culture and the induction of anti
Authors
J.E. Osorio, T.D. Powell, R.S. Frank, K. Moss, E.J. Haanes, S.R. Smith, T.E. Rocke, D.T. Stinchcomb