Mostrando 21 - 40 Resultados de 45 Para Buscar '"Gray Fox"', tiempo de consulta: 0.13s Limitar resultados
  1. 21
    “…In addition, we tested serum samples from 70 dogs and three wild carnivores, including one bobcat (Lynx rufus), one striped skunk (Mephitis mephitis) and one gray fox (Urocyon cinereoargenteus) for CDV antibodies using immunochromatographic and viral neutralization assays. …”
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  2. 22
    “…Bobcat (Lynx rufus), Coyote (Canis latrans), Eastern Cottontail (Sylvilagus floridanus), Gray Fox (Urocyon cinereoargenteus), Gray Squirrel (Sciurus carolinensis), Northern Raccoon (Procyon lotor), Virginia Opossum (Didelphis virginiana), and unidentified rodents (mice and rats) were documented using burrows in all four ecoregions. …”
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  3. 23
    “…Using a cross-sectional study design, we collected cardiac tissue and blood from hunter-donated wildlife carcasses- including raccoon (Procyon lotor), coyote (Canis latrans), gray fox (Urocyon cinereoargenteus), and bobcat (Lynx rufus) – from central Texas, a region with established populations of infected triatomine vectors and increasing diagnoses of Chagas disease in domestic dogs. …”
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  4. 24
    “…Overall, the estimated probability of nest depredation by wild pigs was 0.3, equivalent to native species of nest predators in the study area (e.g., gray fox [Urocyon cinereoargenteus], raccoon [Procyon lotor], and coyote [Canis latrans]). …”
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  5. 25
    “…In the temperate forest, four plant species (but mainly Arctostaphylos pungens) were dispersed by four mammal species. The gray fox dispersed the highest average number of seeds per scat (66.8 seeds). …”
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  6. 26
    “…Progress continues with ORV toward preventing the spread and working toward elimination of a unique variant of gray fox (Urocyon cinereoargenteus) rabies in west central Texas. …”
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  7. 27
    “…Eight different species of carnivores were captured, including coyotes (Canis latrans), gray fox (Urocyon cinereoargenteus), desert foxes (Vulpes macrotis), striped skunks (Mephitis mephitis), hooded skunks (Mephitis macroura), lynxes (Lynx rufus), raccoons (Procyon lotor), and badgers (Taxidea taxus). …”
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    “…Abs to CDV and CPV were detected in 25.4% and 45.5% of coyotes, 36.5% and 52.4% of red foxes, and 12.5% and 68.8% of gray foxes, respectively. Abs to both viruses were detected in 9.7% of coyotes, 19.1% of red foxes, and 12.5% of gray foxes. …”
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    “…There was strong evidence for the effects of elevation, season, and temperature impacting detection probability of all four species, with understory height and canopy cover also influencing gray foxes and skunks. For all four mesocarnivores, a second stage multi-species co-occurrence model better explained patterns of detection than the single-species occurrence model. …”
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  13. 33
    “…More carnivore species were detected with cameras in orchards than in wildland sites, and for bobcats and gray foxes, orchards were associated with higher occupancy rates. …”
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  14. 34
    “…Nonetheless, our data suggest that independent rabies enzootics are now established in wild terrestrial carnivores (skunks in California and north-central United States, gray foxes in Texas and Arizona, and mongooses in Puerto Rico), as a consequence of different spillover events from long-term rabies enzootics associated with dogs. …”
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  15. 35
    “…One hundred and thirty-one wild mammals were evaluated, including two gray foxes, two crab-eating foxes (from zoos), four coyotes, 62 opossum and 63 spiny rats captured close to rural towns. …”
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  16. 36
    “…The clinical sign of aggression was significantly associated with rabid stray cats (odds ratio, OR = 2.3) and RRV affected major wild terrestrial animal species individually, which included raccoons (OR = 2.8), skunks (OR = 8.0), gray foxes (OR = 21.3), red foxes (OR = 10.4), woodchucks (OR = 4.7) and coyotes (OR = 27.6). …”
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  17. 37
    “…The shift of dog-maintained viruses into gray foxes, coyotes, skunks and other wild mesocarnivores throughout the Americas and to mongooses in the Caribbean has augmented the risk of human rabies exposures and has complicated control efforts. …”
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  18. 38
    “…Turkey vultures (Cathartes aura) and coyotes (Canis latrans) scavenged equally across treatments, whereas gray foxes (Urocyon cinereoargenteus) scavenged along roads and power lines, but not in forests. …”
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  19. 39
    por Despres, Hannah W., Mills, Margaret G., Schmidt, Madaline M., Gov, Jolene, Perez, Yael, Jindrich, Mars, Crawford, Allison M. L., Kohl, Warren T., Rosenblatt, Elias, Kubinski, Hannah C., Simmons, Benjamin C., Nippes, Miles C., Goldenberg, Anne J., Murtha, Kristina E., Nicoloro, Samantha, Harris, Mia J., Feeley, Avery C., Gelinas, Taylor K., Cronin, Maeve K., Frederick, Robert S., Thomas, Matthew, Johnson, Meaghan E., Murphy, James, Lenzini, Elle B., Carr, Peter A., Berger, Danielle H., Mehta, Soham P., Floreani, Christopher J., Koval, Amelia C., Young, Aleah L., Fish, Jess H., Wallace, Jack, Chaney, Ella, Ushay, Grace, Ross, Rebecca S., Vostal, Erin M., Thisner, Maya C., Gonet, Kyliegh E., Deane, Owen C., Pelletiere, Kari R., Rockafeller, Vegas C., Waterman, Madeline, Barry, Tyler W., Goering, Catriona C., Shipman, Sarah D., Shiers, Allie C., Reilly, Claire E., Duff, Alanna M., Shirley, David J., Jerome, Keith R., Pérez-Osorio, Ailyn C., Greninger, Alexander L., Fortin, Nick, Mosher, Brittany A., Bruce, Emily A.
    Publicado 2023
    “…Data was collected from red and gray foxes (Vulpes vulples and Urocyon cineroargentus, respectively), fishers (Martes pennati), river otters (Lutra canadensis), coyotes (Canis lantrans), bobcats (Lynx rufus rufus), black bears (Ursus americanus), and white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus). …”
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  20. 40
    “…Common carnivore species (coyotes, gray foxes, and bobcats) had high occupancy probability in highly disturbed sites, while all other carnivore species had a higher probability of occupancy in low disturbance protected areas. …”
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