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Abstract

Decades of community ecology research have highlighted the importance of resource availability, habitat heterogeneity, and colonization opportunities in driving biodiversity. Less clear, however, is whether a similar suite of factors explains the diversity of symbionts. Here, we used a hierarchical ...

Author(s)
McCaffrey, K.; Johnson, P. T. J.
Publisher
Springer Berlin, Heidelberg, Germany
Citation
Oecologia, 2017, 183, 4, pp 927-938
Abstract

Parasites often alter host physiology and behavior, which can enhance predation risk for infected hosts. Higher consumption of parasitized prey can in turn lead to a less parasitized prey population (the healthy herd hypothesis). Loxothylacus panopaei is a non-native castrating barnacle parasite on ...

Author(s)
Gehman, A. L. M.; Byers, J. E.
Publisher
Springer Berlin, Heidelberg, Germany
Citation
Oecologia, 2017, 183, 4, pp 919-926
Abstract

Many wild swine populations in different parts of the World have experienced an unprecedented demographic explosion that may result in increased exposure of humans to wild swine zoonotic pathogens. Interactions between humans and wild swine leading to pathogen transmission could come from different ...

Author(s)
Ruiz-Fons, F.
Publisher
Wiley, Berlin, Germany
Citation
Transboundary and Emerging Diseases, 2017, 64, 1, pp 68-88
Abstract

Habitat disturbance from development, resource extraction, off-road vehicle use, and energy development ranks highly among threats to desert systems worldwide. In the Mojave Desert, United States, these disturbances have promoted the establishment of nonnative plants, so that native grasses and...

Author(s)
Drake, K. K.; Bowen, L.; Nussear, K. E.; Esque, T. C.; Berger, A. J.; Custer, N. A.; Waters, S. C.; Johnson, J. D.; Miles, A. K.; Lewison, R. L.
Publisher
Wiley-Blackwell, Oxford, UK
Citation
Ecosphere, 2016, 7, 10, pp e01531
Abstract

The increasing rate of disease incidence resulting from devastating effects of plant pathogens, limits crop productivity globally, thus affecting food security. The current global population growth with many mouths to feed is dependent on vibrant agricultural productivity. The effects of...

Author(s)
Nwauzoma, A. B.
Publisher
Academic Journals, Lagos, Nigeria
Citation
African Journal of Agricultural Research, 2016, 11, 42, pp 4172-4180
Abstract

Ecological theory suggests that pathogens are capable of regulating or limiting host population dynamics, and this relationship has been empirically established in several settings. However, although studies of childhood diseases were integral to the development of disease ecology, few studies show ...

Author(s)
Manlove, K.; Cassirer, E. F.; Cross, P. C.; Plowright, R. K.; Hudson, P. J.
Publisher
Wiley-Blackwell, Hoboken, USA
Citation
Ecology, 2016, 97, 10, pp 2593-2602
Abstract

About 5-10% of the world's land surface is currently wetland but possibly >70% is already destroyed or impaired. Conservation of these unique ecosystems lags progress in other realms, reflected in high rates of biodiversity loss. Wetlands provide a range of critically important ecosystem...

Author(s)
Kingsford, R. T.; Basset, A.; Jackson, L.
Publisher
Wiley-Blackwell, Oxford, UK
Citation
Aquatic Conservation: Marine and Freshwater Ecosystems, 2016, 26, 5, pp 892-916
Abstract

Rabies is an endemic disease in Brazil, where it is considered a serious public health problem. Although the number of human and dog-transmitted cases has declined in recent decades, rabies in wildlife has emerged considerably. Among the sylvatic animals, wild canids have been considered important...

Author(s)
Cordeiro, R. de A.; Duarte, N. F. H.; Rolim, B. N.; Soares Júnior, F. A.; Franco, I. C. F.; Ferrer, L. L.; Almeida, C. P.; Duarte, B. H.; Araújo, D. B. de; Rocha, M. F. G.; Brilhante, R. S. N.; Favoretto, S. R.; Sidrim, J. J. C.
Publisher
Wiley-Blackwell, Berlin, Germany
Citation
Zoonoses and Public Health, 2016, 63, 6, pp 486-493
Abstract

The tick-borne haemoparasite Theileria orientalis is the most important infectious cause of anaemia in New Zealand cattle. Since 2012 a previously unrecorded type, T. orientalis type 2 (Ikeda), has been associated with disease outbreaks of anaemia, lethargy, jaundice and deaths on over 1000 New...

Author(s)
Lawrence, K. E.; Summers, S. R.; Heath, A. C. G.; McFadden, A. M. J.; Pulford, D. J.; Pomroy, W. E.
Publisher
Elsevier B. V., Amsterdam, Netherlands
Citation
Veterinary Parasitology, 2016, 224, pp 82-91
Abstract

The relatively small population size and restricted distribution of the Guadalupe fur seal Arctocephalus townsendi could make it highly vulnerable to infectious diseases. We performed a colony-level assessment in this species of the prevalence and presence of Brucella spp. and Leptospira spp.,...

Author(s)
Ziehl-Quirós, E. C.; García-Aguilar, M. C.; Mellink, E.
Publisher
Inter-Research Science Center, Oldendorf, Germany
Citation
Diseases of Aquatic Organisms, 2016, 122, 3, pp 185-193

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