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EXERTIONAL MYOPATHY IN WHOOPING CRANES (GRUS AMERICANA) WITH PROGNOSTIC GUIDELINES

Journal of Zoo and Wildlife Medicine, 2005
Exertional myopathy developed in three whooping cranes (Grus americana) secondary to routine capture, handling, and trauma. Presumptive diagnosis of exertional myopathy was based on history of recent capture or trauma, clinical signs, and elevation of aspartate aminotransferase, alanine aminotransferase, creatine kinase, lactate dehydrogenase, and ...
Christopher S Hanley   +2 more
exaly   +3 more sources

Blood Mercury in Three Populations of Endangered Whooping Crane (Grus americana)

Bulletin of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology, 2021
We investigated concentrations of blood total mercury (THg) in three extant populations of endangered Whooping Crane (Grus americana). Blood THg was greater in cranes reintroduced during 2001-2008 that range in the eastern US (median = 0.31 ug/g ww) than both wild cranes in central North America (median = 0.11 ug/g ww) and from captivity (median = 0.01
Barry K Hartup
exaly   +3 more sources

PRESENCE OF ENCYSTED IMMATURE NEMATODES IN A RELEASED WHOOPING CRANE (GRUS AMERICANA)

Journal of Zoo and Wildlife Medicine, 2001
Numerous nematode cysts were observed throughout the mesentery and on the surface of gastrointestinal organs in a whooping crane (Grus americana) that was found dead in a central Florida marsh. Morphology of the excysted nematodes most closely resembled third-stage larvae in the order Spirurida but were not similar to any species previously reported in
Marilyn G Spalding
exaly   +3 more sources

MANIFESTATIONS OF HYPERPARATHYROIDISM IN JUVENILE WHOOPING CRANES (GRUS AMERICANA)

Journal of Zoo and Wildlife Medicine, 2019
Juvenile whooping cranes (Grus americana) raised for wild release were found to have an increased incidence of rib fractures at fledging in 2017 compared with the previous 16 years. Serum analysis showed 30-day-old juveniles in 2017 (n = 12) had significantly lower 25-hydroxyvitamin D3 and significantly higher parathyroid hormone concentrations than ...
Lily Parkinson, Barry K Hartup
exaly   +3 more sources

Survivorship of the Whooping Crane, Grus Americana

Ecology, 1980
population regulation in nature, as proposed in an earlier paper (Y-omnicki 1978a), then one can expect a very heavy mortality among animals leaving one local habitat in search of another. If so, an individual which stays longer in the same local habitat would produce more progeny in his life span.
Richard S Miller
exaly   +2 more sources

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