نتایج جستجو برای: wildlife livestock ecosystem

تعداد نتایج: 118737  

2010

Europe and North America share a similar history in the extirpation and subsequent recovery of large carnivore and ungulate species. Both continents face challenges and opportunities for managing human-wildlife conflict at the junction of livestock production and wildlife conservation. Predation of livestock and disease transmission between wildlife and livestock is an ongoing and escalating wo...

Journal: :The Journal of applied ecology 2011
Katie Hampson Tiziana Lembo Paul Bessell Harriet Auty Craig Packer Jo Halliday Cari A Beesley Robert Fyumagwa Richard Hoare Eblate Ernest Christine Mentzel Kristine L Metzger Titus Mlengeya Karen Stamey Keith Roberts Patricia P Wilkins Sarah Cleaveland

Anthrax is endemic throughout Africa, causing considerable livestock and wildlife losses and severe, sometimes fatal, infection in humans. Predicting the risk of infection is therefore important for public health, wildlife conservation and livestock economies. However, because of the intermittent and variable nature of anthrax outbreaks, associated environmental and climatic conditions, and div...

Journal: :Revue scientifique et technique 2002
R G Bengis R A Kock J Fischer

The long-standing conflict between livestock owners and animal health authorities on the one hand, and wildlife conservationists on the other, is largely based on differing attitudes to controlling diseases of livestock which are associated with wildlife. The authors have attempted to highlight the fact that these disease problems are frequently bi-directional at the wildlife/livestock interfac...

2005
MICHELLE E. GADD

Conflict between wildlife and people can erode local support for conservation. Wildlife-based benefits are intended to offset costs and encourage tolerance or stewardship, but where the linkage between benefits and wildlife is not understood, benefits may be ineffective at bolstering conservation. In Laikipia, Kenya, wildlife and areas devoted to wildlife are on the increase, but most residents...

Journal: :Revue scientifique et technique 2013
J Godfroid B Garin-Bastuji C Saegerman J M Blasco

The epidemiological link between brucellosis in wildlife and brucellosis in livestock and people is widely recognised. When studying brucellosis in wildlife, three questions arise: (i) Is this the result of a spillover from livestock or a sustainable infection in one or more host species of wildlife? (ii) Does wildlife brucellosis represent a reservoir of Brucella strains for livestock? (iii) I...

2013
Ryan S. Miller Mathew L. Farnsworth Jennifer L. Malmberg Matthew L. Farnsworth

In the last half century, significant attention has been given to animal diseases; however, our understanding of disease processes and how to manage them at the livestock–wildlife interface remains limited. In this study, we conduct a systematic review of the scientific literature to evaluate the status of diseases at the livestock–wildlife interface in the United States. Specifically, the goal...

Journal: :Preventive veterinary medicine 2013
Ryan S Miller Matthew L Farnsworth Jennifer L Malmberg

In the last half century, significant attention has been given to animal diseases; however, our understanding of disease processes and how to manage them at the livestock-wildlife interface remains limited. In this study, we conduct a systematic review of the scientific literature to evaluate the status of diseases at the livestock-wildlife interface in the United States. Specifically, the goal...

2017
Maxime Branger Amandine Hauer Lorraine Michelet Claudine Karoui Thierry Cochard Krystel De Cruz Sylvie Henault María Laura Boschiroli Franck Biet

Mycobacterium bovis is the etiologic agent of bovine tuberculosis, a chronic infectious disease affecting livestock, wild animals, and sometimes humans. We report here three draft genome sequences of Mycobacterium bovis strains of spoligotypes SB0821 and SB0134, isolated from wildlife but circulating in wildlife-livestock multihost systems, and SB0121, circulating exclusively in cattle.

2017
Christopher Lepczyk

Wildlife rehabilitation is the treatment and temporary care of injured, diseased, and displaced indigenous animals, and the subsequent release of healthy animals to appropriate habitats in the wild (Mullineaux, 2014). However, local governments often outlaw the rehabilitation of non-native species, such as wild pigs (Sus scrofa) in Alabama. The benefit to wildlife populations of the practice of...

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