|
T |
S |
|
|
|
bTB in European badgers |
|
|
Survival; recruitment |
Life history and
recruitment characteristics of badgers ensure that the bTB reservoir is
maintained |
|
Devil Facial Tumour Disease (DFTD) in Tasmanian devils
(Sarcophilus harrisii) |
|
|
Survival; fecundity |
DFTD affects
the most reproductively valuable devils |
|
CWD in white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) |
|
|
Likelihood of infection |
How CWD may be spatially distributed |
|
CWD in North American elk (Cervus elaphus nelsoni) |
|
|
Prevalence; allele frequency |
The relationship between CWD prevalence,
and the PRNP 12L allele, which may extend the latency of CWD in North
American elk |
|
Influenza A in captive mallard (Anas platyrhynchos) and lesser snow
geese (Chen caerulescens); Yersinia pestis in coyotes |
|
|
Time since infection; force-of-infection |
A method to estimate
force-of-infection from individual antibody data |
|
Brucellosis (Brucella abortus) in wild elk and livestock herds |
|
|
Probability a region has brucellosis infections in its livestock |
The spillover of brucellosuis from elk to livestock may happen more in
regions where unfed elk are contracting the disease from fed elk |
|
CWD in mule deer (Odocoileus hemionus) |
|
|
Prevalence |
The
impacts of CWD on population growth rate, and covariates which moderate
disease dynamics |
|
Five pathogens (porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome virus,
pseudorabies virus, Influenza A virus, Hepatitis E virus, and
Brucella spp.) infecting wild pig (Sus scrofa) |
|
|
Seroprevalence |
Demographics were not good at predicting
seroprevalence. It is important to account for detection error
(sensitivity and specificity of a diagnostic test) |
|