keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38631871/a-case-report-of-cryptococcosis-in-a-captive-cape-hyrax-procavia-capensis
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Niki Sedghi Masoud, Susumu Iwaide, Natsumi Kobayashi, Daisuke Nakagawa, Miyuki Orito, Nobuaki Iwahashi, Tomoaki Murakami
Cryptococcosis, a globally distributed mycotic disease caused by Cryptococcus neoformans or C. gattii, has been extensively studied in various domestic animals and humans. However, non-domestic species have often been overlooked in the literature, with limited attention given to their susceptibility and contribution to the epidemiology of the disease. In this study, a captive two-year-old Cape hyrax in a Japanese zoo exhibited neurological symptoms and torticollis, ultimately succumbing to the infection. Necropsy and pathological analyses, including histopathological techniques and PCR, revealed the presence of C...
April 18, 2024: Journal of Veterinary Medical Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38631638/impact-of-hydrocarbon-extraction-on-heavy-metal-concentrations-in-lowland-paca-cuniculus-paca-from-the-peruvian-amazon
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Pedro Mayor, Lucía Soliño, Mar Cartró-Sabaté, Martí Orta-Martínez
Oil has been extracted from the Western Amazon since the 1920s, leading to severe environmental contamination due to frequent occurrence oil spills and the dumping of produced water. Local inhabitants, along with environmental and human rights organizations, have reported the adverse effects of oil-related pollution on their livelihoods and the ecosystems they depend on. Here, we study accumulation of oil-related heavy metals in wildlife, and its subsequent incorporation into the trophic chain. We analysed the concentration of 14 heavy metals (Cd, Cr, Hg, As, Ni, V, Ba, Se, Be, Fe, Cu, Zn, Mn, Al) in liver samples from 78 lowland pacas (Cuniculus paca) hunted for subsistence in an oil-polluted area from the northern Peruvian Amazon where oil has been extracted since the 1970s (n = 38), and two control areas, the Yavari-Mirín River basin (n = 20), and the Pucacuro River basin (n = 20)...
April 15, 2024: Science of the Total Environment
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38630682/engaging-internal-and-external-audiences-to-develop-and-promote-zoo-based-conservation-efforts
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Nichole L Nageotte, Marley Steele-Inama, Brittany Frederick, Erica Elvove, Shelby E McDonald
As place-based conservation organizations, zoos are in a central position to support individuals in making small changes in their lives that will support the protection of wildlife and their habitats. This paper describes the secondary analysis of data collected from multi-phase front-end, exploratory evaluation that informed the development of a conservation action campaign in association with a non-profit, urban zoo. In phase one, internal organization staff were invited to attend workshops during which they brainstormed potential conservation actions that they felt were important for the zoo to promote...
2024: PloS One
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38630660/effects-of-relational-and-instrumental-messaging-on-human-perception-of-rattlesnakes
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Erin B Allison, Emily N Taylor, Zackary A Graham, Melissa Amarello, Jeffrey J Smith, Zachary J Loughman
We tested the effects of relational and instrumental message strategies on US residents' perception of rattlesnakes-animals that tend to generate feelings of fear, disgust, or hatred but are nevertheless key members of healthy ecosystems. We deployed an online survey to social media users (n = 1,182) to describe perceptions of rattlesnakes and assess the change after viewing a randomly selected relational or instrumental video message. An 8-item, pre-and post-Rattlesnake Perception Test (RPT) evaluated perception variables along emotional, knowledge, and behavioral gradients on a 5-point Likert scale; the eight responses were combined to produce an Aggregate Rattlesnake Perception (ARP) score for each participant...
2024: PloS One
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38629586/assessing-the-combined-effects-of-host-and-parasite-exposure-to-forever-chemicals-in-an-amphibian-echinostome-system
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Melissa E Lech, Youn J Choi, Linda S Lee, Maria S Sepúlveda, Jason T Hoverman
Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) are environmental contaminants of growing concern due to their potential negative effects on wildlife and human health. Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances have been shown to alter immune function in various taxa, which could influence the outcomes of host-parasite interactions. To date, studies have focused on the effects of PFAS on host susceptibility to parasites, but no studies have addressed the effects of PFAS on parasites. To address this knowledge gap, we independently manipulated exposure of larval northern leopard frogs (Rana pipiens) and parasites (flatworms) via their snail intermediate host to environmentally relevant PFAS concentrations and then conducted trials to assess host susceptibility to infection, parasite infectivity, and parasite longevity after emergence from the host...
April 17, 2024: Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38628940/a-combined-methodological-approach-to-characterize-pig-farming-and-its-influence-on-the-occurrence-of-interactions-between-wild-boars-and-domestic-pigs-in-corsican-micro-regions
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Liane Dupon, Bastien Trabucco, Facundo Muñoz, François Casabianca, François Charrier, Morgane Laval, Ferran Jori
The pig sector in Corsica is based by a wide range of farming systems, mainly characterized on traditional extensive practices, which favor contacts between domestic and wild individuals. These contacts are suspected to influence the maintenance and the transmission of shared infectious diseases between both populations. Therefore, it is important to develop methods that allow to understand and anticipate their occurrence. Modeling these interactions requires accurate data on the presence, location and use of land on pig farms and farming practices, but such data are often unavailable, incomplete or outdated...
2024: Frontiers in Veterinary Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38628916/how-territoriality-and-sociality-influence-the-habitat-selection-and-movements-of-a-large-carnivore
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
K Whitney Hansen, Nathan Ranc, John Morgan, Neil R Jordan, J Weldon McNutt, Alan Wilson, Christopher C Wilmers
While territoriality is one of the key mechanisms influencing carnivore space use, most studies quantify resource selection and movement in the absence of conspecific influence or territorial structure. Our analysis incorporated social information in a resource selection framework to investigate mechanisms of territoriality and intra-specific competition on the habitat selection of a large, social carnivore. We fit integrated step selection functions to 3-h GPS data from 12 collared African wild dog packs in the Okavango Delta and estimated selection coefficients using a conditional Poisson likelihood with random effects...
April 2024: Ecology and Evolution
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38628912/the-high-cost-of-movement-in-an-arid-working-landscape-for-an-endangered-amphibian
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Colin W Brocka, Maria Vittoria Mazzamuto, John L Koprowski
Connectivity is essential for the maintenance of genetic diversity and stability of wildlife populations. Drought and changing precipitation regimes have caused natural aquatic amphibian breeding habitats to disappear or become isolated and have led to the replacement of natural surface water with artificial livestock water tanks. Terrestrial movement is the only means of responding to aquatic threats in arid landscapes and to allow population connectivity. Aridity may present an impenetrable barrier in hydrologically fragmented environments...
April 2024: Ecology and Evolution
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38627945/coxiella-burnetii-serostatus-in-dromedary-camels-camelus-dromedarius-is-associated-with-the-presence-of-c-burnetii-dna-in-attached-ticks-in-laikipia-county-kenya
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Tess Rooney, Eric M Fèvre, Jandouwe Villinger, Maris Brenn-White, Charles O Cummings, Daniel Chai, Joseph Kamau, Alice Kiyong'a, Dennis Getange, Dickens O Ochieng, Velma Kivali, Dawn Zimmerman, Marieke Rosenbaum, Felicia B Nutter, Sharon L Deem
AIMS: Q fever is a globally distributed, neglected zoonotic disease of conservation and public health importance, caused by the bacterium Coxiella burnetii. Coxiella burnetii normally causes subclinical infections in livestock, but may also cause reproductive pathology and spontaneous abortions in artiodactyl species. One such artiodactyl, the dromedary camel (Camelus dromedarius), is an increasingly important livestock species in semi-arid landscapes. Ticks are naturally infected with C...
April 16, 2024: Zoonoses and Public Health
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38627867/hunting-mode-and-habitat-selection-mediate-the-success-of-human-hunters
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Kaitlyn M Gaynor, Alex McInturff, Briana L Abrahms, Alison M Smith, Justin S Brashares
BACKGROUND: As a globally widespread apex predator, humans have unprecedented lethal and non-lethal effects on prey populations and ecosystems. Yet compared to non-human predators, little is known about the movement ecology of human hunters, including how hunting behavior interacts with the environment. METHODS: We characterized the hunting modes, habitat selection, and harvest success of 483 rifle hunters in California using high-resolution GPS data. We used Hidden Markov Models to characterize fine-scale movement behavior, and k-means clustering to group hunters by hunting mode, on the basis of their time spent in each behavioral state...
April 16, 2024: Movement Ecology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38626237/crop-cover-and-nutrient-levels-mediate-the-effects-of-land-management-type-on-aquatic-invertebrate-richness-in-prairie-potholes
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
David Anthony Kirk, Sara J Collins, Juan Andrés Martínez-Lanfranco, Amanda E Martin
Aquatic invertebrates provide important ecosystem services, including decomposition and nutrient cycling, and provide nutrition for birds, fish, amphibians, and bats. Thus, the effects of agricultural land management practices on aquatic invertebrates are relevant to farmers, wildlife biologists, and policymakers. Here, we used data on aquatic invertebrates (159 taxa, 73 to species, 75 to genus/family) collected in 40 wetlands in the Canadian prairies to test for direct and indirect relationships among land management types (perennial cover, organic, minimum tillage, conventional), landscape structure (cropland and wetland cover within the surrounding landscape), and water quality (total nutrient levels, turbidity) on species richness of invertebrates using structural equation modelling...
2024: PloS One
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38626206/the-adaptive-immune-response-to-trichuris-in-wild-versus-laboratory-mice-an-established-model-system-in-context
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Iris Mair, Jonathan Fenn, Andrew Wolfenden, Ann E Lowe, Alex Bennett, Andrew Muir, Jacob Thompson, Olive Dieumerci, Larisa Logunova, Susanne Shultz, Janette E Bradley, Kathryn J Else
Laboratory model organisms have provided a window into how the immune system functions. An increasing body of evidence, however, suggests that the immune responses of naive laboratory animals may differ substantially to those of their wild counterparts. Past exposure, environmental challenges and physiological condition may all impact on immune responsiveness. Chronic infections of soil-transmitted helminths, which we define as establishment of adult, fecund worms, impose significant health burdens on humans, livestock and wildlife, with limited treatment success...
April 16, 2024: PLoS Pathogens
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38625927/influence-of-temporary-emigration-on-wood-turtle-glyptemys-insculpta-detectability-with-implications-for-abundance-estimation
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Allyson N Beard, Donald J Brown, Eric T Hileman, Michael T Jones, Jena M Staggs, Ron A Moen, Andrew F Badje, Christopher M Lituma
Reliable population estimates are important for making informed management decisions about wildlife species. Standardized survey protocols have been developed for monitoring population trends of the wood turtle (Glyptemys insculpta), a semi-aquatic freshwater turtle species of conservation concern throughout its distribution in east-central North America. The protocols use repeated active search surveys of defined areas, allowing for estimation of survey-specific detection probability (p) and site-specific abundance...
2024: PloS One
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38623519/modeling-habitat-suitability-for-the-lesser-known-populations-of-endangered-mountain-nyala-tragelaphus-buxtoni-in-the-arsi-and-ahmar-mountains-ethiopia
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ejigu Alemayehu Worku, Paul H Evangelista, Anagaw Atickem, Afework Bekele, Jakob Bro-Jørgensen, Nils Chr Stenseth
Habitat suitability models have become a valuable tool for wildlife conservation and management, and are frequently used to better understand the range and habitat requirements of rare and endangered species. In this study, we employed two habitat suitability modeling techniques, namely Boosted Regression Tree (BRT) and Maximum Entropy (Maxent) models, to identify potential suitable habitats for the endangered mountain nyala ( Tragelaphus buxtoni ) and environmental factors affecting its distribution in the Arsi and Ahmar Mountains of Ethiopia...
April 2024: Ecology and Evolution
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38621232/biological-upcycling-of-plastics-waste
#35
REVIEW
Ross R Klauer, D Alex Hansen, Derek Wu, Lummy Maria Oliveira Monteiro, Kevin V Solomon, Mark A Blenner
Plastic wastes accumulate in the environment, impacting wildlife and human health and representing a significant pool of inexpensive waste carbon that could form feedstock for the sustainable production of commodity chemicals, monomers, and specialty chemicals. Current mechanical recycling technologies are not economically attractive due to the lower-quality plastics that are produced in each iteration. Thus, the development of a plastics economy requires a solution that can deconstruct plastics and generate value from the deconstruction products...
April 15, 2024: Annual Review of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38621142/gentrification-drives-patterns-of-alpha-and-beta-diversity-in-cities
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Mason Fidino, Heather A Sander, Jesse S Lewis, Elizabeth W Lehrer, Kimberly Rivera, Maureen H Murray, Henry C Adams, Anna Kase, Andrea Flores, Theodore Stankowich, Christopher J Schell, Carmen M Salsbury, Adam T Rohnke, Mark J Jordan, Austin M Green, Ashley R Gramza, Amanda J Zellmer, Jacque Williamson, Thilina D Surasinghe, Hunter Storm, Kimberly L Sparks, Travis J Ryan, Katie R Remine, Mary E Pendergast, Kayleigh Mullen, Darren E Minier, Christopher R Middaugh, Amy L Mertl, Maureen R McClung, Robert A Long, Rachel N Larson, Michel T Kohl, Lavendar R Harris, Courtney T Hall, Jeffrey D Haight, David Drake, Alyssa M Davidge, Ann O Cheek, Christopher P Bloch, Elizabeth G Biro, Whitney J B Anthonysamy, Julia L Angstmann, Maximilian L Allen, Solny A Adalsteinsson, Anne G Short Gianotti, Jalene M LaMontagne, Tiziana A Gelmi-Candusso, Seth B Magle
While there is increasing recognition that social processes in cities like gentrification have ecological consequences, we lack nuanced understanding of the ways gentrification affects urban biodiversity. We analyzed a large camera trap dataset of mammals (>500 g) to evaluate how gentrification impacts species richness and community composition across 23 US cities. After controlling for the negative effect of impervious cover, gentrified parts of cities had the highest mammal species richness. Change in community composition was associated with gentrification in a few cities, which were mostly located along the West Coast...
April 23, 2024: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38619093/tissue-and-cellular-tropism-of-eptesicus-fuscus-gammaherpesvirus-in-big-brown-bats-potential-role-of-pulmonary-intravascular-macrophages
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ursula G Perdrizet, Janet E Hill, LaRhonda Sobchishin, Baljit Singh, Champika Fernando, Trent K Bollinger, Vikram Misra
Gammaherpesviruses (γHVs) are recognized as important pathogens in humans but their relationship with other animal hosts, especially wildlife species, is less well characterized. Our objectives were to examine natural Eptesicus fuscus gammaherpesvirus (EfHV) infections in their host, the big brown bat ( Eptesicus fuscus ), and determine whether infection is associated with disease. In tissue samples from 132 individual big brown bats, EfHV DNA was detected by polymerase chain reaction in 41 bats. Tissues from 59 of these cases, including 17 from bats with detectable EfHV genomes, were analyzed...
April 15, 2024: Veterinary Pathology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38617828/harvest-and-decimation-affect-genetic-drift-and-the-effective-population-size-in-wild-reindeer
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Thomas Kvalnes, Øystein Flagstad, Jørn Våge, Olav Strand, Hildegunn Viljugrein, Bernt-Erik Sæther
Harvesting and culling are methods used to monitor and manage wildlife diseases. An important consequence of these practices is a change in the genetic dynamics of affected populations that may threaten their long-term viability. The effective population size ( N e ) is a fundamental parameter for describing such changes as it determines the amount of genetic drift in a population. Here, we estimate N e of a harvested wild reindeer population in Norway. Then we use simulations to investigate the genetic consequences of management efforts for handling a recent spread of chronic wasting disease, including increased adult male harvest and population decimation...
April 2024: Evolutionary Applications
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38617824/planning-and-implementing-genetic-rescue-of-an-endangered-freshwater-fish-population-in-a-regulated-river-where-low-flow-reduces-breeding-opportunities-and-may-trigger-inbreeding-depression
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Alexandra Pavlova, Nadja M Schneller, Mark Lintermans, Matt Beitzel, Diana A Robledo-Ruiz, Paul Sunnucks
Augmenting depleted genetic diversity can improve the fitness and evolutionary potential of wildlife populations, but developing effective management approaches requires genetically monitored test cases. One such case is the small, isolated and inbred Cotter River population of an endangered Australian freshwater fish, the Macquarie perch Macquaria australasica , which over 3 years (2017-2019) received 71 translocated migrants from a closely related, genetically more diverse population. We used genetic monitoring to test whether immigrants bred, interbred with local fish and augmented population genetic diversity...
April 2024: Evolutionary Applications
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38617222/a-paired-analysis-of-mercury-among-non-invasive-tissues-to-inform-bat-conservation-monitoring
#40
Molly C Simonis, Kimberlee Whitmore, Kristin E Dyer, Meagan Allira, Bret Demory, Matthew M Chumchal, Daniel J Becker
UNLABELLED: Contaminant exposure can harm wildlife. However, measuring contaminant exposure in wildlife can be challenging due to accessibility of species and/or sampling tissue matrices needed to answer research questions regarding exposure. For example, in bats and other taxa that roost, it may be best to collect pooled feces from colonies for minimal disturbance to species of conservation concern, but fecal contaminant concentrations do not provide contaminant bioaccumulation estimates...
April 1, 2024: bioRxiv
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