Parasites and Wildlife
Material type:
- text
- computer
- online resource
- 9783036568522
- 9783036568539
- books978-3-0365-6853-9
- Epidemiology and Medical statistics
- Medicine and Nursing
- 18S rRNA
- Acari
- apicomplexa
- arctic fox
- Babesia
- cattle
- Chile
- China
- climate change
- coccidian
- conservation
- cox1
- distribution
- DNA extraction
- E. cuniculi
- E. hellem
- Echinococcus multilocularis
- Encephalitozoon intestinalis
- endangered
- Enterocytozoon bieneusi
- epidemiology
- European wild rabbit
- feces
- foodborne
- gamasid mite
- game meat
- genotype
- genotyping
- helminths
- host selection
- Iberian hare
- Iceland
- land conversion
- life cycle
- Lithuania
- long-term study
- marine
- mice
- molecular
- molecular identification
- mustelidae
- n/a
- neuropathology
- non-human primates
- Ornithonyssus bacoti
- parasite
- PCR
- protists
- protozoan
- Rodentia
- rodents
- Sarcocystis
- Sarcocystis-like
- seasonality
- shared infections
- small mammals
- striped dolphin
- tissue cysts
- Toxoplasma gondii
- Trichinella
- vector-borne bacteria
- vector-borne protozoan parasites
- voles
- wild birds
- wildlife
- wildlife-livestock interface
- Yunnan
- zoonoses
- zoonosis
- zoonotic
Open Access Unrestricted online access star
This reprint focuses on field studies aimed at unraveling the complex networks created by interactions between parasites and hosts in a given ecosystem. Since most transboundary diseases have been propagated from the wilderness to anthropized areas, societies are increasingly concerned about the relevance of wildlife as it pertains to global health. In this respect, research on parasites that may affect the biology and population equilibrium of wildlife is of major interest, especially when a One Health perspective is considered. The studies compiled in the present Special Issue fall within several areas of interest, such as epidemiology, diagnosis, emerging zoonoses, food safety, conservation issues, parasite-host interactions, and the pathology of infections caused by parasites in wild host species.
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