Results 121 to 130 of about 2,423 (179)
Evaluating Potential Deployment Strategies for Oral Delivery of Vaccines for Cervids. [PDF]
Zimmerling AS, Napper S.
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Accessory Antler Growing From the Left Zygomatic Bone of a Male Rusa Deer (Rusa timorensis). [PDF]
Kierdorf U, Barrière P.
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Acute drought desiccates highly used habitat and drives herbivores into irrigated croplands. [PDF]
Leclerc M +6 more
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Journal of Wildlife Diseases, 1976
A case of tularemia was confirmed in a 51-year-old man who acquired the disease from a mule deer, Odocoileus hemionus. Francisella tularensis was isolated from bone marrow of the deer carcass.
R W, Emmons +5 more
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A case of tularemia was confirmed in a 51-year-old man who acquired the disease from a mule deer, Odocoileus hemionus. Francisella tularensis was isolated from bone marrow of the deer carcass.
R W, Emmons +5 more
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DERMATOMYCOSIS IN A MULE DEER IN ALBERTA
Journal of Wildlife Diseases, 1974Severe dermatomycosis (ringworm) caused by an unidentified dermatophyte occurred in a mature, debilitated, female mule deer (Odocoileus hemionus) from southwestern Alberta. Lesions involved much of the body surface and were characterized by severe alopecia of the face, lower thoracic wall and abdomen, perineum and limbs. The skin was markedly encrusted
G A, Chalmers, M W, Barrett
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Journal of Mammalogy, 1955
An adult Rocky Mountain mule deer doe ( Odocoileus hemionius hemionius ) was shot about 6 am, July 10, 1954. The doe, gross weight 132 lbs., 117 cm. crown-rump length, and estimated from her teeth wear according to the technic of Severinghaus (1949) to be about two years of age, was collected on Trisky Creek, National Bison Range.
L. G. Browman, H. S. Sears
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An adult Rocky Mountain mule deer doe ( Odocoileus hemionius hemionius ) was shot about 6 am, July 10, 1954. The doe, gross weight 132 lbs., 117 cm. crown-rump length, and estimated from her teeth wear according to the technic of Severinghaus (1949) to be about two years of age, was collected on Trisky Creek, National Bison Range.
L. G. Browman, H. S. Sears
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EXPERIMENTAL COCCIDIOSIS IN MULE DEER FAWNS
Journal of Wildlife Diseases, 1980Five mule deer fawns (Odocoileus hemionus) ranging in age from 3 to 6 weeks were given sporulated Eimeria mccordocki oocysts orally. Four of the five fawns developed coccidiosis. Initial clinical signs appeared by 8 to 9 days postinoculation and included elevated body temperature and bloody diarrhea.
B, Abbas, G, Post
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Induced toxoplasmosis in pronghorns and mule deer
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association, 1982SUMMARY Two mule deer and 2 pronghorns were inoculated intraruminally with infective oocysts (deer with 100,000 each, and pronghorns with 100, and 10,000) of the GT-1 strain of Toxoplasma gondii. The deer died 7 and 11 days after inoculation, and the pronghorns died 13 and 19 days after inoculation. Necropsy findings were typical of acute toxoplasmosis.
J P, Dubey, E T, Thorne, E S, Williams
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Thermoregulation in mule deer and elk
Canadian Journal of Zoology, 1984Thermoregulatory responses of mule deer (Odocoileus hemionus hemionus) and elk (Cervus elaphus nelsoni) were analyzed for air temperatures outdoors between 2 and 34 °C in summer and −38 and +24 °C in winter. Body temperatures differed between species, seasons, and ages.
Katherine L. Parker, Charles T. Robbins
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