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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

Patterns of lichen diversity in Yellowstone National Park

We here report 359 species in 103 genera from Yellowstone National Park. We found 71.3% of the total number of species in Picea engelmannii forests and 57.4% of the total number in Pseudotsuga menziesii stands. This compares to 42.3% of the species in Pinus contorta and 37.0% of the species in Pinus contorta/Pinus albicaulis stands. The presence of old Pseudotsuga menziesii and mature Picea engelm
Authors
S. Eversman, C. M. Wetmore, K. Glew, J. P. Bennett

A baiting system for delivery of an oral plague vaccine to black-tailed prairie dogs

Laboratory and field studies were conducted between July and October 1999 to identify bait preference, biomarker efficacy, and bait acceptance rates for delivering an oral plague vaccine to black-tailed prairie dogs (Cynomys ludovicianus). Twenty juvenile captive prairie dogs were offered alfalfa baits containing either alfalfa, alfalfa and 5% molasses, or alfalfa, 5% molasses and 4% salt. Based o
Authors
Terry E. Creekmore, Tonie E. Rocke, J. Hurley

Avian vacuolar myelinopathy: a newly recognized fatal neurologic disease of eagles, waterfowl, and other birds

Wildlife biologists and health specialists have been frustrated by a long list of negative findings in their AVM investigations, however studies continue to provide pieces of information to aid the determination of the cause and its source. Available data indicated that AVM may have been present since at least 1990, occurs in at least five states, has been documented during October through April a
Authors
John R. Fischer, L.A. Lewis, T. Augspurger, T.E. Rocke

Car lichens in the United States

No abstract available.
Authors
J. P. Bennett

Algal layer ratios as indicators of air pollutant effects in Permelia sulcata

Parmelia sulcata Taylor is generally believed to be fairly pollution tolerant, and consequently it is sometimes collected in urban and/or polluted localities. The condition of these specimens, however, is not always luxuriant and healthy. This study tested the hypothesis that total thallus and algal layer thickness, and the algal layer ratio would be thinner in polluted areas, thus allowing these
Authors
J. P. Bennett

Application of diagnostic tests for mycoplasmal infections of desert and gopher tortoises with management recommendations

Mycoplasmosis is a transmissible upper respiratory tract disease that has affected plans for management and conservation of wild desert and gopher tortoises in the United States. Although impact of mycoplasmosis on populations of desert and gopher tortoises is unknown, increased prevalence of seropositive animals as well as field observations of clinically ill tortoises have occurred in associatio
Authors
D.R. Brown, Isabella M. Schumacher, Grace S. Mclaughlin, L.D. Wendland, Mary E. Brown, P.A. Klein, E.R. Jacobson

What are parasitologists doing in the United States Geological Survey?

The United States Geological Survey (USGS) was formed in 1879 as the nation's primary natural science and information agency. The mission of the agency is to provide scientific information to a??describe and understand the Earth; minimize loss of life and property from natural disasters; manage water, biological, energy, and mineral resources; and enhance and protect our quality of life.a?? Prior
Authors
Rebecca A. Cole

West Nile virus in livestock and wildlife

West Nile (WN) virus, the causative agent of West Nile fever, a dengue-like infection in humans, is one of the most widely distributed arthropod-borne viruses extending, until recently, from Africa, the Middle East, Europe, and western Asia. WN virus is a natural avian virus transmitted between birds primarily by ornithophilic mosquitoes, although isolations have been reported from mammals and amp
Authors
R. G. McLean, S. R. Ubico, D. Bourne, N. Komar

Epizootiologic studies of avian vacuolar myelinopathy in waterbirds

Epizootic avian vacuolar myelinopathy (AVM) was first recognized as a neurologic disease in bald eagles (Haliaeetus leucocephalus) and American coots (Fulica americana) in Arkansas, USA in 1994 and 1996, respectively, but attempts to identify the etiology of the disease have been unsuccessful to date. Between 1998 and 2001, wing clipped sentinel birds (wild American coots and game farm mallards [A
Authors
Tonie E. Rocke, N. J. Thomas, T. Augspurger, Kimberli J.G. Miller

National Wildlife Health Center's Quarterly Mortality Report

No abstract available.
Authors
K. A. Converse, R. Sohn, Kimberli J.G. Miller, A. Schrader, K. McLaughlin

The Salton Sea: Proceedings of the Salton Sea Symposium

No abstract available.
Authors
D. A. Barnum, J. F. Elder, D. Stevens, M. Friend

The epizootiology of type C botulism in fish-eating birds at Salton Sea, California

During 1996, type C avian botulism killed over 15,000 fish-eating birds at the Salton Sea in southern California. Amont those affected were nearly 10,000 western white pelicans (Pelecanus erythrorhynchos) and over 1,200 endangered California brown pelicans (Pelecanus occidentalis californicus). Since 1996, smaller epizootics have occurred every year. Type C botulism is not typically associated wit
Authors
P. Nol