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Location
Ithaca, New York
Start Date
27-9-1983 12:00 AM
Description
Parasites of wild animals are of great importance to the health of humans and their domestic animals. Wild birds serve as reservoirs of various forms of viral encephalitis that are transmitted to humans and domestic animals through the bites of mosquitoes. Wild rodents serve as reservoirs of plague and tularemia and feed the ticks that transmit rickettsial dis-eases such as Rocky Mountain spotted fever. These are familiar examples that do not require further elaboration here. The objective of the following out-line is to review several less notorious but nevertheless important parasitisms that are communicable from wildlife to domestic animals and humans.
Recommended Citation
Georgi, J. R. (1983). Parasites of wildlife transmissible to domestic animals and humans. In Decker, D. J. (Ed.), The First Eastern Wildlife Damage Control Conference (pp. 287-291). Ithaca, NY: Cornell University.
Included in
Parasites of Wildlife Transmissible to Domestic Animals and Humans
Ithaca, New York
Parasites of wild animals are of great importance to the health of humans and their domestic animals. Wild birds serve as reservoirs of various forms of viral encephalitis that are transmitted to humans and domestic animals through the bites of mosquitoes. Wild rodents serve as reservoirs of plague and tularemia and feed the ticks that transmit rickettsial dis-eases such as Rocky Mountain spotted fever. These are familiar examples that do not require further elaboration here. The objective of the following out-line is to review several less notorious but nevertheless important parasitisms that are communicable from wildlife to domestic animals and humans.