257 results on '"Didelphis virginiana"'
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2. We are not the problem, cars are: effect of different human activities in an urban area on opossums health and population size.
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Glebskiy, Yury, Parra-Campos, Daniela Aimee, and Cano-Santana, Zenon
- Abstract
Understanding the health of urban animals is key for preventing and controlling zoonotic diseases. To achieve this goal, it’s necessary to understand what factors could have an impact on those animals’ health. Therefore, the aim of this article is to compare some health characteristics of opossums (Didelphis virginiana) in urban environments with and without human presence. For this, we trapped opossums in two urbanized areas: one dominated by buildings and one by roads and parking lots (plus two control locations in natural areas). During two periods: normal activities and under lockdown due to COVID-19 conditions (when the presence of people was minimal). We found that in the building area, human presence has almost no effect on the opossums’ health (with only minor changes in erythrocyte counts and tar coverage); however, in the parking lot, the opossum population dropped drastically because of human activities (use of vehicles). This suggests that human presence is not harmful for those animals, but cars are. Therefore, the use of vehicles has a negative impact on opossums’ health and could increase the spreading of zoonotic diseases. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2025
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3. Seasonal Variation in Mammalian Mesopredator Spatiotemporal Overlap on a Barrier Island Complex.
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Bransford, Timothy D., Harris, Spencer A., and Forys, Elizabeth A.
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RACCOON , *RESOURCE availability (Ecology) , *BARRIER islands , *COYOTE , *TOP predators , *SHORE birds - Abstract
Simple Summary: In human-dominated areas where top predators no longer occur, interactions among medium-sized predators can be complex, especially when considering how they share space and time based on seasonal changes in food and habitat. We studied this using camera traps placed in various habitats from February 2021 to July 2023, at Fort De Soto County Park, a barrier island complex located in west central Florida. Three species of mammals (coyotes, raccoons, and Virginia opossums) were the most frequently photographed. Our analysis showed that during the wet season, these species were most likely to be photographed in similar habitats and times. During the dry season, when perhaps there were fewer food sources, the species shifted when they were active in a manner that created less overlap. Also in the dry season, opossums made more use of mangrove habitats. Understanding the relationships among these species is important because this area supports nesting shorebirds and sea turtles, known prey for these predators. Due to lack of apex predators in human-dominated landscapes, mesopredator relationships are complex and spatiotemporal niche partitioning strategies can vary, especially when seasonal shifts in resource availability occur. Our objective was to understand spatiotemporal niche overlap across seasons among mesopredators inhabiting a barrier island complex. We placed 19 unbaited cameras throughout Fort De Soto County Park, Florida, USA between February 2021 and July 2023. Of six mesopredator species detected, three species had >75 detections during both the wet and dry seasons (coyote, Canis latrans; Virginia opossum, Didelphis virginiana; and raccoon, Procyon lotor). Using general linear mixed models, we determined that during the wet season coyote–raccoon and raccoon–opossum detections were positively associated with each other (p < 0.05). During the dry season, raccoon–opossum detections were positively associated, and opossums were more likely to be detected around mangroves. After calculating coefficients of overlap, we found all three species varied their temporal activity between seasons. During the dry season exclusively, all three mesopredators occupied different temporal niches. The park's isolated but developed nature has potentially led to a destabilized mesopredator community. Understanding seasonal mesopredator dynamics of Fort De Soto is particularly important because this park supports a high number of nesting shorebirds and sea turtles, which are known food sources for mesopredators. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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4. Opossums cleaning our cities: consumption of rodent carcasses in an urban reserve.
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Glebskiy, Yury and Cano-Santana, Zenon
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OPOSSUMS , *CITIES & towns , *RODENTS , *ENVIRONMENTAL health , *RODENT populations , *ECOSYSTEMS - Abstract
Rodent carcasses are a source of food and a biological hazard that can commonly be found in natural and anthropic ecosystems. Therefore, this article aims to determine which organisms consume those carcasses in an urban reserve. For this, 53 rodent carcasses were placed in front of camera traps to record their consumers. The final destiny of 41 carcasses is known: 76 % were consumed by opossums (Didelphis virginiana) and 24 % by ringtails (Bassariscus astutus). Flies and ants attempted to take advantage of the carcasses but in all cases ended up losing the competition to mammals. Opossums are the most efficient carrion consumers, as they exhibit learning as to where the carcasses are located and are able to consume old carcasses (up to 10 days old). This suggests that mid-size mammals, especially opossums, are providing an important ecological and health service for both natural ecosystems and human populations by removing rodent carcasses that otherwise could become sources of infection. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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5. Effects of sardines as an attractant on carnivore detection and temporal activity patterns at remote camera traps.
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Siegfried, Anna C., Harris, Stephen N., Olfenbuttel, Colleen, and Jachowski, David S.
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Context. Adding an attractant to remote camera traps has become a popular method to increase detections of cryptic carnivores. However, there is ongoing debate about whether this practice can biasthe behaviour and activity patterns of these species. Aims. Our aim wasto determine how using a popular attractant at camera traps could affect carnivore detection probabilities and temporal activity. Methods. We used an experimental design in which we randomly set half of our camera traps on arrays at two sites in western North Carolina with an attractant: canned sardines in oil. Halfway through the survey season, we switched which camera traps had sardines and which did not. We estimated detection probability for each carnivore species observed using occupancy models, and we used kernel density estimations to evaluate changes in diel activity patterns between camera traps with and without an attractant. Key results. We found that when sardines were used at camera traps, detectability of bobcats (Lynx rufus), coyotes (Canis latrans), northern raccoons (Procyon lotor), Virginia opossums(Didelphisvirginiana), and eastern spotted skunks(Spilogale putorius) more than doubled, but there waslittle or no effect on striped skunk (Mephitis mephitis) detectability. Of the species we most frequently detected (coyotes, raccoons, and opossums), activity patterns between camera traps with and without a sardine attractant overlapped moderately to highly, and a significant effect on diel activity patterns was observed only for raccoons. Conclusions. Use of attractants can greatly increase the probability of detecting nearly all carnivores at camera traps. The effects of attractants on diel activity patterns are species-specific, with two of our three most-detected species unaffected by their use, suggesting that attractants can be used to effectively study these behaviours in some carnivore species. Implications. A sardine attractant can increase the detection of many carnivore species, using camera traps, without causing a significant deviation of diel activity patterns, thus allowing for unbiased investigations into most species’ spatio–temporal behaviour in the Appalachian Mountains – and likely other systems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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6. Head posture impacts mammalian hyoid position and suprahyoid muscle length: implication for swallowing biomechanics.
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Li, Peishu, Ross, Callum F., Luo, Zhe-Xi, and Gidmark, Nicholas J.
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HEAD injuries , *DEGLUTITION , *HYOID bone , *BIOMECHANICS , *MUSCLE physiology , *SKULL - Abstract
Instantaneous head posture (IHP) can extensively alter resting hyoid position in humans, yet postural effects on resting hyoid position remain poorly documented among mammals in general. Clarifying this relationship is essential for evaluating interspecific variation in hyoid posture across evolution, and understanding its implications for hyolingual soft tissue function and swallowing motor control. Using Didelphis virginiana as a model, we conducted static manipulation experiments to show that head flexion shifts hyoid position rostrally relative to the cranium across different gapes. IHP-induced shifts in hyoid position along the anteroposterior axis are comparable to in vivo hyoid protraction distance during swallowing. IHP also has opposite effects on passive genio- and stylohyoid muscle lengths. High-speed biplanar videoradiography suggests Didelphis consistently swallows at neutral to flexed posture, with stereotyped hyoid kinematics across different head postures. IHP change can affect suprahyoid muscle force production by shifting their positions on the length-tension curve, and redirecting lines of action and the resultant force from supra- and infrahyoid muscles. We hypothesize that demands on muscle performance may constrain the range of swallowing head postures in mammals. This article is part of the theme issue 'Food processing and nutritional assimilation in animals'. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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7. Influence of human development and predators on patterns of Virginia opossum occupancy, abundance, and activity.
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Veon, J. T., Lassiter, E. V., Johansson, E., Shaw, M., McTigue, L., Massey, A., Gibson, R., and DeGregorio, B. A.
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PREDATION , *OPOSSUMS , *PREDATORY animals , *HUMAN ecology , *ANIMAL behavior , *URBAN growth - Abstract
As human development continues to expand, wildlife must relocate or adapt to survive. Many mammalian mesopredators, such as the Virginia opossum (Didelphis virginiana), have adapted to living alongside human development. Furthermore, top‐down predation pressure may be altered in nuanced ways within the human environment. Species such as opossums may be shielded from predation by human development or behavioral changes in predators. Understanding how dominant and subordinate mesopredators co‐exist across natural and developed areas will provide insight into how wildlife communities are structured. Our objective was to evaluate how opossum occupancy, abundance, and activity were associated with human development and the relative abundance of their predators. We used data from a nationwide camera trapping study, Snapshot USA, to estimate opossum occupancy, abundance, and activity. We related these measures to the surrounding landscape and urbanization variables. We found that opossum occupancy was positively associated with anthropogenic sound (a surrogate for human activity). Furthermore, opossums in heavily forested areas were more likely to be detected in locations with higher predicted anthropogenic sounds. In areas with a high density of human housing, opossum relative abundance increased when predator abundance increased. We also found opossums were strictly nocturnal and shifted their activity to earlier in the evening in the presence of high predator abundance. Our results suggest that humans and their urban development can have multidimensional impacts on opossum behavior and occurrence, and could facilitate changes in predator–prey dynamics. Future research should evaluate if the association of opossums with urban areas is due to human‐subsidized resources or caused by reduced mortality from altered predator–prey dynamics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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8. Metazoan and protozoan pathology of wild opossums (Didelphis virginiana) in Mexico
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Jorge L. García-Valle, Johnatan A.R. Ramírez, Luis García-Prieto, Cecilia Ramírez-Hernández, Rafael Ramírez-Romero, Rafael J. Macedo-Barragán, Alfonso López-Mayagoitia, Julio Martínez-Burnes, and Luis J. García-Márquez
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Didelphis virginiana ,wild opossums ,protozoa ,metazoa ,parasites ,pathology ,Mexico ,Veterinary medicine ,SF600-1100 - Abstract
ABSTRACT: The aim was to describe the incidence and lesions caused by metazoan and protozoan parasites in Didelphis virginiana opossums in Mexico. From 2019 to 2021, twenty D. virginiana were collected from the state of Colima, Mexico. Post mortem, parasitological, and histopathological studies were performed to identify and describe their lesions and findings. All opossums(20/20) presented at least one type of parasite of the twelve found; the most abundant were nematodes 58.33% (7/12) Didelphostrongylus hayesi, Turgida turgida, Cruzia sp., Viannaia sp., Trichuris didelphis, Trichostrongylidae and Gnathostoma sp. Protozoa 25% (3/12), including Sarcocystis sp., Besnoitia sp., and Sarcocystis sp. A single specimen of Mathevotaenia sp., 8.3% (1/12), and Paragonimus mexicanus 8.3%, were identified (1/12). The most affected systems were the digestive, respiratory, and musculoskeletal. The most abundant parasites were Turgida turgida (20/20) 100%, Cruzia sp., (16/20) 80%, and Viannaia sp. (6/20) 30%, followed by Sarcocystis sp. cysts, (6/20) 30%. The associated parasitic lesions were: D. hayesi produce eosinophilic granulomatous bronchopneumonia, P. mexicanus eosinophilic focal granulomatous pneumonia, and Besnoitia sp., focal eosinophilic lymphoplasmacytic interstitial pneumonia. Gnathostoma and T. turgida caused severe eosinophilic granulomatous focal gastritis. Viannaia sp., Sarcocystis sp., Mathevotaenia sp., and Trichostrongylidae; caused diffuse eosinophilic mucosal enteritis. Cruzia sp., and T. didelphis, induced diffuse eosinophilic mucosal typhlitis. Sarcocystis sp. cysts were detected in the cytoplasm of muscle fibers without histological changes.
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- 2023
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9. Assessing the impact of free-ranging cats (Felis silvestris catus) and dogs (Canis lupus familiaris) on wildlife in a natural urban reserve in Mexico City.
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Ramos-Rendón, A. Karina, Gual-Sill, Fernando, Cervantes, Fernando A., González-Salazar, Constantino, García-Morales, Rodrigo, and Martínez-Meyer, Enrique
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URBAN animals ,DOGS ,CATS ,URBAN ecology ,NATURE reserves - Abstract
Conservation of natural ecosystems embedded in urban contexts is a big challenge because diverse anthropogenic factors continuously impact native biodiversity and ecological processes. One such factor is the pervasive presence of free-ranging predators, especially cats (Felis silvestris catus) and dogs (Canis lupus familiaris), which may severely affect local wildlife. The "Reserva Ecológica del Pedregal de San Ángel" (REPSA), located within the main campus of the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México (UNAM), in southern Mexico City, is an important natural area that protects a peculiar volcanic spill ecosystem holding native and endemic biodiversity. In 2012, UNAM launched a control program of cats and dogs in REPSA that is still active. To assess the potential impact of cats and dogs on wildlife species, we used live and camera traps coupled with capture-recapture analyses to evaluate changes in the vertebrate community, particularly in the presence and abundance of two medium-size native mammals (Didelphis virginiana and Bassariscus astutus), before (2008–2009) and during (2017–2019) the control program. Results showed that the abundance of dogs decreased between the two periods, but not so the abundance of cats, whereas the native vertebrate diversity increased from the pre-control stage to the control period. Furthermore, we found a negative, non-significant relationship between the abundance of D. virginiana and that of dogs, and a positive, also non-significant relationship between the presence and abundance of B. astutus with the abundance of dogs. We conclude that the control program of free-ranging predators has been beneficial for the conservation of native vertebrates and recommend its continuation and enhancement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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10. Assessment of habitat‐specific competition for oral rabies vaccine baits between raccoons and opossums.
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Helton, James L., Hill, Jacob E., Bernasconi, David A., Dixon, Wesley C., Chipman, Richard B., Gilbert, Amy T., Beasley, James C., Dharmarajan, Guha, and Rhodes, Olin E.
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RABIES vaccines , *ORAL vaccines , *OPOSSUMS , *RACCOON , *RABIES virus , *WETLANDS , *LAND cover - Abstract
Throughout the eastern United States, the National Rabies Management Program (NRMP) distributes oral rabies vaccine (ORV) baits to manage rabies virus circulation in raccoon (Procyon lotor) populations. The consumption of vaccine baits by non‐target species including Virginia opossums (Didelphis virginiana) may reduce the effectiveness of ORV programs, but competition for baits remains poorly quantified in many areas of the southeastern United States. We distributed placebo ORV baits injected with a biomarker across 4 land cover types (bottomland hardwood, upland pine, riparian, isolated wetland) on the Savannah River Site in South Carolina, USA, 2017–2019. We then trapped and collected whiskers from 247 raccoons and 78 opossums to assess biomarker presence using fluorescent microscopy. Our data revealed greater bait uptake probability by raccoons (estimated x̅ = 0.30, 95% CI = 0.19–0.44) compared to opossums (estimated x̅ = 0.11, 95% CI = 0.05–0.23) across all cover types surveyed. Probability of bait consumption was not affected by cover type or the abundance of raccoons or opossums. Among raccoons, males were more likely to consume baits than females (estimated x̅ = 0.28, 95% CI = 0.17–0.44 for males and 0.14, 95% CI = 0.05–0.31 for females) and probability of consumption increased by 0.08 with each additional day trapped during the 10‐day trapping session. Uptake rates for raccoons were relatively low compared to other studies and not influenced by competition with opossums. These low consumption rates indicate that additional research addressing the roles of baiting season, bait density, and resource selection will be important to maximize ORV bait uptake by target species in these southeastern landscapes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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11. Flea Abundance, Species Composition, and Prevalence of Rickettsioses from Urban Wildlife in Orange County, California, 2015-2019
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Penicks, Amanda, Krueger, Laura, Campbell, James, Fogarty, Carrie, Rangel, Daisy, Nguyen, Kiet, and Cummings, Robert
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cat flea ,Ctenocephalides felis ,Didelphis virginiana ,Echidnophaga gallinacea ,ectoparasites ,human flea ,Mephitis mephitis ,opossum ,public health ,Pulex simulans ,rickettsia ,skunk ,sticktight flea ,typhus ,urban wildlife - Abstract
Fleas infesting urban wildlife have been epidemiologically linked to the transmission of flea-borne rickettsial pathogens in urban and suburban areas of Orange County, California. To understand the prevalence of flea-borne rickettsioses caused by either Rickettsia felis or R. typhi, a survey of fleas from wildlife was conducted to determine the flea species composition of host animals and prevalence of rickettsial pathogens in fleas on host animals. This study reports flea abundance, species composition, and infestation intensity on unowned domestic cats and wildlife (i.e., coyotes, opossums, rabbits, skunks, squirrels, raccoons, and commensal rodents) collected in urban neighborhoods of Orange County. The survey revealed presence of the northern rat flea on eastern fox squirrels, and widespread distribution of the human flea on skunks and coyotes in Orange County. The flea index and prevalence of flea-bone rickettsioses in fleas has been used by the Orange County Mosquito and Vector Control District to guide decisions regarding risk management and intervention strategies to reduce and prevent the transmission of flea-borne pathogens. The prevalence of R. felis and R. typhi in fleas in Orange County was 8.94% and 0.39%, respectively. Roof rats, eastern fox squirrels, and striped skunks had the highest diversity of flea species, while the Virginia opossum had the lowest, as determined by the Simpson’s Diversity Index. The sticktight flea was found to have the highest diversity of mammal hosts. It is not known how flea species composition on hosts impacts the maintenance and persistence of rickettsial and other pathogens in fleas from urban wildlife in Orange County.
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- 2020
12. Do Coyotes Eat Mesocarnivores in Southern California? A Molecular Genetic Analysis
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Shedden, Jennifer M., Bucklin, Danielle M., Quinn, Niamh M., and Stapp, Paul
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Canis latrans ,coyote ,Didelphis virginiana ,Mephitis mephitis ,mesocarnivores ,molecular genetics ,opossum ,Procyon lotor ,raccoon ,rodenticide ,striped skunk ,urban carnivores - Abstract
Urban coyotes are commonly exposed to rodenticides used to control non-native commensal rodents, but these rodents are rare in published accounts of their diets. An alternative source of rodenticide exposure is through the consumption of mesocarnivores that have themselves eaten either toxic bait directly or poisoned rodents or invertebrates. Carcasses of 311 nuisance and road-killed coyotes from suburban and urban areas of southern California were collected from 2016-2018. Stomachs were dissected and prey items were identified visually. Stomach contents containing tissue from suspected mammalian prey (N = 178) were homogenized and DNA was extracted. Genus-specific primers (123-366 bp) were designed for Virginia opossums, raccoons, and striped skunks, regionally common species that are known to be consumed by coyotes. PCR was performed for each primer pair, and presence of PCR products of particular amplicon lengths were determined by gel electrophoresis. Coyote stomachs containing a PCR product of the appropriate size were considered to contain that prey item. Land use data were used to assess landscape factors that are associated with the consumption of mesocarnivores. Combining both techniques, mesocarnivores were detected at low frequencies: opossums (8%) were more common than raccoons (2%) and skunks (2%). Some 72% of meso-carnivores present in stomachs were detected by molecular methods, while 66% were identified by morphological methods. Opossums were associated with increased development and anthropogenic land use, while skunks were associated with large natural areas, and raccoons used all habitat types. The extent to which mesocarnivores themselves eat poisoned prey remains unknown, although they may be a potential source of exposure for coyotes. Additionally, landscape factors do not appear to be related to raccoon consumption but may influence presence, and therefore consumption, of skunks and opossums.
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- 2020
13. Venipuncture and Blood Collection on Conscious Virginia Opossums (Didelphis virginiana).
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Strehl, Cassandra C. P., Mitlyng, Natalie, Jauquet, Elly, and Zieman, Elliott A.
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We developed a venipuncture technique of the ventral caudal vein in conscious Virginia opossums (Didelphis virginiana) in cage traps, enabling blood sampling without anesthesia. Blood samples were successfully collected from all 28 opossums in this study by this technique. Draw volume of <0.1 mL occurred in only four opossums (14%). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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14. Evaluating anthropogenic influence on a mesopredator: opossum (Didelphis virginiana) isotope values influenced by corn agriculture more than urbanization.
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Walsh, Lisa L. and Tucker, Priscilla K.
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OPOSSUMS , *CARBON isotopes , *ISOTOPES , *URBANIZATION , *AGRICULTURAL development - Abstract
The composition of North American communities is changing due to anthropogenic land-use alteration. Mammalian mesopredators' ability to consume anthropogenic trash due to their generalist diet has been referenced to partially explain their success in altered landscapes as they spread northward. We evaluated this assumption using carbon isotope values (δ13C) of the Virginia opossum (Didelphis virginiana (Kerr, 1792)), a mesopredator expanding its range. δ13C values increase from consumption of C4 plants, including corn, a common food additive in North America. Opossum hairs from the Midwestern U.S. and Northeast were evaluated using generalized linear mixed models (GLMMs) to compare the predictive performances between winter harshness variables and anthropogenic variables. We also evaluated δ13C values through time to test if the temporal pattern of increased corn additives is mirrored in northern opossums. The best-performing GLMM included year and percentage corn fields as positive covariates. Variance in δ13C values increased exclusively in the "cornbelt" Midwest after 1970. δ13C values compared across space and time bolster evidence for the influence of agricultural development on the opossum's range expansion. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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15. Molecular phylogeny supports invalidation of Didelphodiplostomum and Pharyngostomoides (Digenea: Diplostomidae) and reveals a Tylodelphys from mammals.
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Achatz, Tyler J, Chermak, Taylor P, Martens, Jakson R, Woodyard, Ethan T, Rosser, Thomas G, Pulis, Eric E, Weinstein, Sara B, Mcallister, Chris T, Kinsella, John M, and Tkach, Vasyl V
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MOLECULAR phylogeny , *DIGENEA , *NUCLEOTIDE sequence , *DNA sequencing , *RACCOON - Abstract
Alaria , Didelphodiplostomum and Pharyngostomoides are among genera of diplostomid digeneans known to parasitize mammalian definitive hosts. Despite numerous recent molecular phylogenetic studies of diplostomids, limited DNA sequence data is available from diplostomids parasitic in mammals. Herein, we provide the first 28S rDNA and cox1 mtDNA sequences from morphologically identified, adult specimens of Didelphodiplostomum and Pharyngostomoides. Newly generated 28S sequences were used to infer the phylogenetic interrelationships of these two genera among other major lineages of diplostomoideans. The phylogeny based on 28S and a review of morphology clearly suggests that Pharyngostomoides should be considered a junior synonym of Alaria , while Didelphodiplostomum should be considered a junior synonym of Tylodelphys. Pharyngostomoides procyonis (type species), Pharyngostomoides adenocephala and Pharyngostomoides dasyuri were transferred into Alaria as Alaria procyonis comb. nov. , Alaria adenocephala comb. nov. and Alaria dasyuri comb. nov. ; Didelphodiplostomum variabile (type species) and Didelphodiplostomum nunezae were transferred into Tylodelphys as Tylodelphys variabilis comb. nov. and Tylodelphys nunezae comb. nov. In addition, Alaria ovalis comb. nov. (formerly included in Pharyngostomoides) was restored and transferred into Alaria based on a morphological study of well-fixed, adult specimens and the comparison of cox1 DNA sequences among Alaria spp. The diplostomid genus Parallelorchis was restored based on review of morphology. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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16. Influence of landscape attributes on Virginia opossum density.
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Bernasconi, David A., Dixon, Wesley C., Hamilton, Matthew T., Helton, James L., Chipman, Richard B., Gilbert, Amy T., Beasley, James C., Rhodes, Olin E., and Dharmarajan, Guha
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OPOSSUMS , *WETLANDS , *RURAL Americans , *HARDWOOD forests , *HARDWOODS , *RIPARIAN forests , *LAND cover - Abstract
The Virginia opossum (Didelphis virginiana), North America's only marsupial, has a range extending from southern Ontario, Canada, to the Yucatan Peninsula, Mexico, and from the Atlantic seaboard to the Pacific. Despite the Virginia opossum's taxonomic uniqueness in relation to other mammals in North America and rapidly expanding distribution, its ecology remains relatively understudied. Our poor understanding of the ecology of this important mesopredator is especially pronounced in the rural southeastern United States. Our goal was to estimate effects of habitat on opossum density within an extensive multi‐year spatial capture‐recapture study. Additionally, we compared the results of this spatial capture‐recapture analysis with a simple relative abundance index. Opossum densities in the relatively underdeveloped regions of the southeastern United States were lower compared to the more human‐dominated landscapes of the Northeast and Midwest. In the southeastern United States, Virginia opossums occurred at a higher density in bottomland swamp and riparian hardwood forest compared to upland pine (Pinus spp.) plantations and isolated wetlands. These results reinforce the notion that the Virginia opossum is commonly associated with land cover types adjacent to permanent water (bottomland swamps, riparian hardwood). The relatively low density of opossums at isolated wetland sites suggests that the large spatial scale of selection demonstrated by opossums gives the species access to preferable cover types within the same landscape. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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17. Widespread exposure to anticoagulant rodenticides among common urban mesopredators in Chicago.
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Buckley, Jacqueline Y., Murray, Maureen H., de la Sancha, Noé U., Fidino, Mason, Byers, Kaylee A., Fyffe, Rebecca, and Magle, Seth
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- 2024
- Full Text
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18. CONTRASTING ACTIVITY TIMES BETWEEN RACCOONS (PROCYON LOTOR) AND VIRGINIA OPOSSUMS (DIDELPHIS VIRGINIANA) IN URBAN GREEN SPACES.
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Mims, Destiny M, Yasuda, Sophie A, and Jordan, Mark J
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RACCOON , *PUBLIC spaces , *OPOSSUMS , *URBAN animals , *CITIES & towns - Abstract
As urbanization increases, impacts on urban wildlife behavior are becoming more apparent. Using camera traps, we compared activity times of Raccoons (Procyon lotor) with those of Virginia Opossums (Didelphis virginiana) in natural areas of Seattle, Washington. Previous studies found that Virginia Opossums and Raccoons are significantly more active at night than at any other time. However, these studies occurred exclusively in forested or agricultural landscapes. We deployed motion-triggered camera traps in greenspaces of Seattle to test the hypothesis that Raccoons and Virginia Opossums are both primarily active at night in an urban environment. Our results demonstrated a statistically significant difference in activity time distributions between the species. Virginia Opossums were exclusively nocturnal, whereas Raccoons allocated their activity between nocturnal and crepuscular periods. This study provides a snapshot of mesopredator behavior in an environment heavily influenced by humans and informs the effective management of Raccoons in urban areas. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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19. January 3, 2021: Celebrating the last day of the year
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Douglas, Angela E., author
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- 2023
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20. Identification of Zoonotic and Vector-borne Infectious Agents Associated with Opossums (Didelphis virginiana) in Residential Neighborhoods of Orange County, California
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Krueger, Laura, Bai, Ying, Bennett, Steve, Fogarty, Carrie, Sun, Sokanary, Kosoy, Michael, Maina, Alice, Nelson, Kimberly, Platzer, Ed, Osikowicz, Lynn, Richards, Allen L., Shariar, Farshid, Trinidad, Albert, Cummings, and Robert
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Bartonella ,Candidatus Rickettsia asemboensis ,Candidatus Rickettsia senegalensis ,cat fleas ,Ctenocephalides felis ,Didelphis virginiana ,disease ,flea-borne rickettsial disease ,Leptospirosis ,opossum ,Orange County CA ,public health ,Rickettsia felis ,Rickettsia typhi ,Salmonella - Abstract
Opossums and cat fleas have been epidemiologically linked to flea-borne rickettsial disease transmission in residential backyards of Orange County, California. In 2013, a study was initiated to better elucidate the life history of opossums and their role as vectors of disease and hosts for both internal and external parasites. The study population consisted of adult opossums collected year-round from flea-borne rickettsial disease exposure sites, and moribund opossums submitted by wildlife rehabilitators in Orange County. Carcasses were examined for ectoparasites and necropsied, which included the removal and collection of endoparasites, organ tissues, feces, and urine. Reproductive life history data suggested one brood of young per year, with an average litter size of 7 (n = 9, range 2-11). Average adult weight was 2.49 kg (range 1.30-4.41 kg). Cat fleas were present on each opossum with an average of 96 fleas per opossum (n = 82, range 2-725). Thirty of 33 cat flea pools tested PCR-positive for one of the following bacteria: Rickettsia felis (53%), R. typhi (3%), the R. felis-like organisms, Candidatus Rickettsia senegalensis (28%) and Ca. Rickettsia asemboensis (3%), or Bartonella vinsonii subsp. arupensis (1.5%). Sticktight fleas (Echidnophaga gallinacea), the only other flea detected, were present on less than 6% of opossums, and ticks were not detected on any carcasses (n = 83). Endoparasitic nematodes Cruzia americana and Physaloptera turgida were present in each stomach and cecum, and Didelphostrongylus hayesior or Heterstongylus heterostrongylus was noted in lung samples of opossums (n = 83). Salmonella spp. were detected in 52% of fecal samples (n = 50), with subsequent typing of strains indicating the presence of human pathogens in all but three of the samples (n = 26). Blood and spleen samples were negative for Bartonella spp., Brucella spp., and Yersinia pestis (n = 33). Sera were negative for Leptospira-specific antibodies and Leptospira DNA was not detected in urine (n = 83). Results from this multi-agency study show that the presence of opossums in the backyard environment put Orange County residents and their pets at risk of flea-borne bartonella and rickettsial diseases and salmonellosis.
- Published
- 2016
21. Vector Control Has a Role to Play in Mitigating the High Incidence of Flea-borne Typhus in Los Angeles County, California
- Author
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Wekesa, J. Wakoli, Nelson, Kimberly, Brisco, Angela, and Fujioka, Kenn
- Subjects
Animal control policy ,cat flea ,Ctenocephalides felis ,Didelphis virginiana ,disease ,Felis catus ,feral cats ,flea-borne typhus ,public health ,Rickettsia felis ,Rickettsia typhi ,trap-neuter-return ,vector-borne disease ,Virginia opossum - Abstract
More than 500 human cases of flea-borne typhus have been reported from Los Angeles and Orange Counties over the past 20 years. Only West Nile virus exceeds flea-borne typhus as an important vector-borne disease in these counties. Despite this, flea-borne typhus garners insignificant public attention compared to West Nile virus. In Los Angeles County alone there were 121 human cases of flea-borne typhus from 2000 to 2009, and 292 human cases from 2010 to 2015. Results from previous studies in Los Angeles and Orange Counties identified a suburban cycle of flea-borne typhus transmission involving backyard wildlife, pets, and the cat flea Ctenocephalides felis. Prior studies and recent observations in Los Angeles County showed that the flea burden of opossums and feral cats is onerously high, and the cat flea is the main vector of the pathogens (Rickettsia typhi and R. felis) responsible for human typhus. The rise of cases in recent years has been accompanied by policy changes in public and private animal control groups that manage nuisance animals in Los Angeles and Orange Counties. Instead of trapping and removing strays and supporting a policy of not feeding wild or stray animals, some governmental agencies and private organizations prefer trap, neuter, and release (TNR) programs and support rehabilitating/relocating feral animals. We believe these policy changes have contributed to the increased incidence of human typhus.
- Published
- 2016
22. Influence of habitat and baiting strategy on oral rabies vaccine bait uptake by raccoons in the southeastern United States.
- Author
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Hill, Jacob E., Miller, Madison L., Chipman, Richard B., Gilbert, Amy T., Beasley, James C., Dharmarajan, Guha, and Rhodes, Olin E.
- Subjects
- *
RESOURCE availability (Ecology) , *HARDWOOD forests , *RIPARIAN forests , *RACCOON , *RABIES vaccines - Abstract
Oral rabies vaccination (ORV) is the primary tool for landscape level control and elimination of rabies virus in terrestrial wildlife species. However, there is currently a limited understanding of how different baiting strategies influence raccoon (Procyon lotor) uptake of ORV baits in non-agricultural habitats in the Southeastern United States, which may hinder the refinement of ORV management for raccoons in this region. Using a combination of new and existing data, we investigated the role of baited area (0.16 vs 3 km2), bait density (75 vs 150 baits/km2) and season (spring vs fall) on placebo ORV bait uptake by raccoons in four rural, non-agricultural habitats in the southeastern United States (bottomland hardwood forest, upland pine forest, riparian forest, and isolated wetlands). Increasing the baited area to 3 km2 increased the proportion of raccoons that consumed baits by 140 % in riparian forests and decreased the proportion consuming baits by 70 % in bottomland hardwood forests. A greater proportion of raccoons consumed baits in riparian habitat in spring compared to fall, but bait density did not influence uptake in either season in this habitat. Increasing the bait density during spring in bottomland hardwoods increased the proportion of raccoons that consumed baits by 270 %, but there was no effect of increasing bait density in bottomland hardwoods during fall. We suggest that variation in habitat contiguity and seasonal resource availability influence how raccoons utilize these habitats which in turn impacts habitat-specific ORV bait uptake. The estimated proportion of raccoons that consumed baits did not exceed 60 % for any treatment, and for most treatments was less than 40 %. These low uptake rates indicate a need for research into additional strategies to maximize raccoon uptake of ORV baits across rural, non-agricultural southeastern landscapes. • Role of oral rabies vaccine (ORV) bait density, area, and season on raccoon uptake varied by habitat. • Variation in bait uptake likely results from differences in how raccoons utilize these habitats. • Raccoons consumed more ORV baits than opossums, but uptake was low overall. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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23. Molecular isolation and identification of Mycobacterium avium subsp. hominissuis in Didelphis virginiana from Hidalgo, Mexico
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Nallely Rivero-Perez, Juan Ocampo-López, Benjamín Valladares-Carranza, Fabián R Gómez de Anda, Francisco J Peña Jiménez, Victor M Martínez Juárez, Armando Peláez Acero, José I Olave Leyva, Deyanira Ojeda-Ramírez, and Adrian Zaragoza-Bastida
- Subjects
didelphis virginiana ,mycobacterium avium complex ,mycobacterium avium subsp. hominissuis ,public health ,Arctic medicine. Tropical medicine ,RC955-962 - Abstract
Objective: To isolate and identify the exact species of the genus Mycobacterium from Didelphis (D.) virginiana, and the direct implications of this bacterium to public health and veterinary medicine. Methods: Thirty-one D. virginiana were captured and necropsied in Hidalgo, Mexico. Tissue samples were collected to culture mycobacteria present and examine individual specimens’ histopathology. Mycobacterium identification was obtained through the application of amplification and sequencing of 16S rDNA techniques. Results: Three strains were isolated and identified as Mycobacterium (M.) avium subsp. hominissuis by utilizing M. avium complex- specific primers. Granulomatous lesions were observed in the subpleural zone (granuloma grade Π ) and bronchial (granuloma grade I ) of the lungs of D. virginiana with positive isolation. Conclusions: Three strains of M. avium subsp. hominissuis, from lung tissue samples of D. virginiana were identified. This subspecies of M. avium has important implications in public health and veterinary medicine.
- Published
- 2020
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24. The Conflicting Roles of Vector Control and Animal Control Agencies in Mitigating the Rise of Human Cases of Flea-borne Typhus in Orange County, California
- Author
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Cummings, Robert, Krueger, Laura, Nguyen, Kiet, Fogarty, Carrie, Bennett, Stephen, Velten, Robert, and Hearst, Michael
- Subjects
cat flea ,Ctenocephalides felis ,Didelphis virginiana ,disease ,Felis catus ,feral cats ,flea-borne typhus ,public health ,Rickettsia felis ,Rickettsia typhi ,trap-neuter-return ,vector-borne disease ,Virginia opossum - Abstract
Flea-borne typhus has emerged as an important vector-borne disease in Los Angeles and Orange Counties, California, with over 400 human cases having been reported since the mid-1980s. In Orange County alone, 127 human cases have been investigated by the Orange County Vector Control District since 2006. Results from a collaborative study with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention from 2006-2008 identified the suburban cycle of flea-borne typhus transmission (backyard wildlife/pets – fleas – humans) in Los Angeles and Orange counties. Free-ranging feral and companion cats and the Virginia opossum were identified as the primary host animals of the cat flea, the insect vector responsible for maintenance and transmission of the etiologic agents, Rickettsia typhi and R. felis, for disease in humans. Although the causes of the increase in human flea-borne typhus cases are not well-defined, this rise has been accompanied by changes in how public and privately-sponsored animal control groups manage nuisance animal populations in the affected southern California counties. Instead of elimination through euthanasia of unwanted feral cats and non-native opossums, rehabilitation, relocation, and “no-trap” policies have become the preferred practice of local animal control agencies. The public health obligation for which governmental animal control agencies were created must be re-emphasized as one way of preventing further outbreaks of flea-borne typhus infections in Orange County and the surrounding California counties.
- Published
- 2014
25. Bacterial expression of a snake venom metalloproteinase inhibitory protein from the North American opossum (D.virginiana).
- Author
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Marshall Werner, R., Miling, Lauren M., Elliott, Brianna M., Hawes, Mitchell R., Wickens, Jennifer M., and Webber, Danielle E.
- Subjects
- *
SNAKE venom , *OPOSSUMS , *VENOM , *CHIMERIC proteins , *CARRIER proteins , *PROTEINS - Abstract
A variety of opossum species are resistant to snake venoms due to the presence of antihemorrhagic and antimyotoxic acidic serum glycoproteins that inhibit several toxic venom components. Two virtually identical antihemorrhagic proteins isolated from either the North American opossum (D. virginiana) or the South American big-eared opossum (D. aurita), termed oprin or DM43 respectively, inhibit specific snake venom metalloproteinases (SVMPs). A better understanding of the structure of these proteins may provide useful insight to determine their mechanism of action and for the development of therapeutics against the global health concern of snake-bite envenomation. The aim of this work is to produce a recombinant snake venom metalloproteinase inhibitor (SVMPI) similar to the above opossum proteins in Escherichia coli and determine if this bacterially produced protein inhibits the proteolytic properties of Western Diamondback rattlesnake (C. atrox) venom. The resulting heterologous SVMPI was produced with either a 6-Histidine or maltose binding protein (MBP) affinity tag on either the C-terminus or N-terminus of the protein, respectively. The presence of the solubility enhancing MBP affinity tag resulted in significantly more soluble protein expression. The inhibitory activity was measured using two complementary assays and the MBP labeled SVMPI showed 7-fold less activity as compared to the 6-Histidine labeled SVMPI. Thus, the bacterially derived SVMPI with an unlabeled N-terminus showed high inhibitory activity (IC 50 = 4.5 μM). The use of a solubility enhancing MBP fusion protein construct appears to be a productive way to express sufficient quantities of this mammalian protein in E. coli for further study. [Display omitted] • Opossum snake venom metalloproteinase inhibitor protein expressed in E. coli. • Use of maltose binding protein fusion construct increased solubility of protein. • Protein successfully inhibited proteolytic effects of rattlesnake venom. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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26. Prevalence, abundance and intensity of eggs and oocysts of gastrointestinal parasites in the opossum Didelphis virginiana Kerr, 1792 in Yucatan, Mexico
- Author
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Aragón-Pech R. A., Ruiz-Piña H. A., Rodríguez-Vivas R. I., Cuxim-Koyoc A. D., and Reyes-Novelo E.
- Subjects
gastrointestinal parasites ,didelphis virginiana ,yucatán ,mexico ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 - Abstract
Virginia opossum, Didelphis virginiana, is a synanthropic mammal associated with peridomestic areas of Yucatán, However, little is known about the gastrointestinal parasite infections of this species. The infection prevalence, mean abundance and mean intensity of eggs and oocysts of gastrointestinal parasites, in opossums captured in the peridomestic areas were estimated in six rural localities of Yucatán, Mexico. Eighty-four faecal samples were processed by flotation technique. McMaster test was used to estimate the number of helminth eggs and protozoa oocysts per gram of feces. Seven genera of gastrointestinal parasites were identified, and then infection prevalence was estimated as follows: Protozoa Eimeria sp. (51.9 %) and Sarcocystis sp. (1 %); nematodes Ancylostoma sp. (80.56 %), Cruzia sp. (62.04 %), Trichuris sp. (60.19 %), Capillaria sp. (29.63 %), Turgida sp. (23.15 %), Toxocara sp. (11.11 %), and Ascaris sp. (1.85 %); and one acanthocephalan: Oligacanthorhynchus sp. (14.81 %). This is the first study on the diversity of gastrointestinal parasites in Virginia opossums, and first evidence about the potential role of opossums in the transmission of zoonotic gastrointestinal parasites in peridomestic areas of Yucatán, Mexico.
- Published
- 2018
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27. Cone pigments in a North American marsupial, the opossum (Didelphis virginiana)
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Jacobs, Gerald H. and Williams, Gary A.
- Subjects
Life Sciences ,Animal Physiology ,Zoology ,Neurosciences ,Cone pigments ,Marsupials ,Didelphis virginiana ,Electroretinogram - Abstract
Only two of the four cone opsin gene families found in vertebrates are represented in contemporary eutherian and marsupial species. Recent genetic studies of two species of South American marsupial detected the presence of representatives from two of the classes of cone opsin genes and the structures of these genes predicted cone pigments with respective peaks in the ultraviolet and long-wavelength portions of the spectrum. The Virginia opossum (Didelphis virginiana), a profoundly nocturnal animal, is the only marsupial species found in North America. The prospects for cone-based vision in this species were examined through recordings of the electroretinogram (ERG), a commonly examined retinal response to photic stimulation. Recorded under flickering-light conditions that elicit signals from cone photoreceptors, the spectral sensitivity of the opossum eye is well accounted for by contributions from the presence of a single cone pigment having peak absorption at 561–562 nm. A series of additional experiments that employed various chromatic adaptation paradigms were conducted in a search for possible contributions from a second (short-wavelength sensitive) cone pigment. We found no evidence that such a mechanism contributes to the ERG in this marsupial.
- Published
- 2010
28. Urban foci of murine typhus involving cat fleas (Ctenocephalides felis felis) collected from opossums in Mexico City.
- Author
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Santoyo‐Colín, Verónica, Sánchez‐Montes, Sokani, Salceda‐Sánchez, Beatriz, Huerta‐Jiménez, Herón, Alcántara‐Rodríguez, Virginia, Becker, Ingeborg, Gual‐Sill, Fernando, and López‐Pérez, Andrés M.
- Subjects
- *
CAT flea , *OPOSSUMS , *FELIS , *CITRATE synthase , *POPULATION - Abstract
Murine typhus, a neglected rickettsiosis caused by Rickettsia typhi, is a common disease in several Latin‐American countries. The sylvatic life cycle of R. typhi encompasses the presence of several wild mammals, particularly opossums of the genus Didelphis and their associated fleas. Due to the colonization of wild environments by human populations, the increase in contact with opossum fleas has generated the presence of urban outbreaks of typhus. For this reason, the aim of our study was to identify the presence and diversity of Rickettsia sp. in fleas collected from opossums of an urban reserve in Mexico City. Opossums were captured from February to September 2017. For the detection of Rickettsia DNA, fragments of 800 bp of the citrate synthase (gltA) and the outer membrane protein B (ompB) were amplified. A total of 141 fleas (111 ♀, 30 ♂) of a single species (Ctenocephalides felis felis) were recovered from 31 Didelphis virginiana. Rickettsia DNA was detected in 17.7% (25/141) of the analysed fleas, recovered from seven infested opossums. The Maximum likelihood of sequences exhibited an identity of 99%–100% with sequences of R. typhi from southern United States. This work represents the first record of R. typhi in fleas from opossums in Mexico. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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29. Association of the invasive Haemaphysalis longicornis tick with vertebrate hosts, other native tick vectors, and tick-borne pathogens in New York City, USA.
- Author
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Tufts, Danielle M., Goodman, Laura B., Benedict, Meghan C., Davis, April D., VanAcker, Meredith C., and Diuk-Wasser, Maria
- Subjects
- *
IXODES scapularis , *CASTOR bean tick , *TICKS , *VERTEBRATES , *RICKETTSIA , *ANAPLASMA phagocytophilum , *WHITE-tailed deer , *MAMMAL populations - Abstract
• Haemaphysalis longicornis were sampled from seven genera of large and medium-sized mammals. • Raccoons, opossums, and white-tailed deer fed a large proportion of H. longicornis. • Haemaphysalis longicornis did not acquire pathogens through co-feeding with native tick vectors. • Host species were infected with a range of pathogens of human and veterinary concern. • Host-derived H. longicornis engorged larvae were not infected with any pathogens. Haemaphysalis longicornis , the Asian longhorned tick, is an invasive ixodid tick that has rapidly spread across the northeastern and southeastern regions of the United States since first reported in 2017. The emergence of H. longicornis presents a potential threat for livestock, wildlife, and human health as the host associations and vector potential of this invasive pest in the United States are poorly understood. Previous field data from the United States has shown that H. longicornis was not associated with natural populations of small mammals or birds, but they show a preference for medium sized mammals in laboratory experiments. Therefore, medium and large sized mammals were sampled on Staten Island, New York, United States, to determine H. longicornis host associations and vector potential for a range of human and veterinary pathogens. A total of 97 hosts were sampled and five species of tick (Amblyomma americanum , Dermacentor variabilis , H. longicornis , Ixodes scapularis , Ixodes cookei) were found feeding concurrently on these hosts. Haemaphysalis longicornis was found in the highest proportions compared with other native tick species on raccoons (55.4%), Virginia opossums (28.9%), and white-tailed deer (11.5%). Tissue, blood, and engorged larvae were tested for 17 different pathogens using a nanoscale PCR platform. Infection with five pathogens (Borrelia burgdorferi , Anaplasma phagocytophilum , Rickettsia spp., Mycoplasma haemocanis , and Bartonella spp.) was detected in host samples, but no pathogens were found in any larval samples. These results suggest that although large and medium sized mammals feed large numbers of H. longicornis ticks in the environment, there is presently a low potential for H. longicornis to acquire pathogens from these wildlife hosts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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30. Isotopic niche breadth of a generalist mesopredator increases with habitat heterogeneity across its range.
- Author
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Walsh, Lisa L. and Tucker, Priscilla K.
- Subjects
STABLE isotope analysis ,ECOLOGICAL niche ,STABLE isotopes ,HETEROGENEITY ,CARBON 4 photosynthesis ,HABITATS - Abstract
Although generalists are becoming increasingly abundant and widespread, little is known about their response to ecological variation they encounter across their range. For example, the generalist's flexible diet is cited to help explain recent range expansions, but no study has directly examined this claim. Here, we use stable isotope values of the Virginia opossum (Didelphis virginiana), a true generalist, to examine an extension of MacArthur's habitat heterogeneity hypothesis for a single generalist species. If a generalist's diet reflects local food abundance, then more heterogeneous landscapes should result in broader niches. We used stable isotope analysis, landcover indices, and WorldClim data to further evaluate how the opossum's use of its environment varies across ancestral regions, expansion fronts, and regions of human‐facilitated introductions. Niche breadth varied across its range, especially between expansion fronts. We found a positive relationship between landcover diversity and isotopic niche breadth. WorldClim variables linked to aridity and C4 plant abundance were most strongly associated with nitrogen (δ15N) and carbon (δ13C) values, respectively. Our results reveal that a generalist's stable isotope signature reflects its local environment, demonstrating their flexible diet is captured with stable isotopes and supporting the generalist habitat heterogeneity hypothesis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Effects of different attractants and human scent on mesocarnivore detection at camera traps.
- Author
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Heinlein, Bracy W., Urbanek, Rachael E., Olfenbuttel, Colleen, and Dukes, Casey G.
- Abstract
Context: Camera traps paired with baits and scented lures can be used to monitor mesocarnivore populations, but not all attractants are equally effective. Several studies have investigated the efficacy of different attractants on the success of luring mesocarnivores to camera traps; fewer studies have examined the effect of human scent at camera traps. Aims: We sought to determine the effects of human scent, four attractants and the interaction between attractants and human scent in luring mesocarnivores to camera traps. Methods: We compared the success of synthetic fermented egg (SFE), fatty acid scent (FAS) tablets, castor oil, and sardines against a control of no attractant in luring mesocarnivores to camera traps. We deployed each attractant and the control with either no regard to masking human scent or attempting to restrict human scent for a total of 10 treatments, and replicated treatments eight to nine times in two different phases. We investigated whether: (1) any attractants increased the probability of capturing a mesocarnivore at a camera trap; (2) not masking human scent affected the probability of capturing a mesocarnivore at a camera trap; and (3) any attractants increased the probability of repeat detections at a given camera trap. We also analysed the behaviour (i.e. speed and distance to attractant) of each mesocarnivore in relation to the attractants. Key results: Sardines improved capture success compared with the control treatments, whereas SFE, castor oil, and FAS tablets had no effect when all mesocarnivores were included in the analyses. Masking human scent did not affect detection rates in the multispecies analyses. Individually, the detection of some species depended on the interactions between masking (or not masking) human scent and some attractants. Conclusions: Sardines were the most effective as a broad-based attractant for mesocarnivores. Mesocarnivores approached traps baited with sardines at slower rates, which allows for a higher success of capturing an image of the animal. Implications: Human scent may not need to be masked when deploying camera traps for multispecies mesocarnivore studies, but researchers should be aware that individual species respond differently to attractants and may have higher capture success with species-specific attractants. Camera traps paired with baits and scented lures can be used to monitor mesocarnivore populations, but not all attractants are equally effective. This study determined the effects of human scent, four traditional mesocarnivore attractants and the interaction between attractants and human scent in luring mesocarnivores to camera traps. Recommendations for multi- and single-species camera trap studies are discussed. Photograph by Bracy W. Heinlein (game camera). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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32. EVIDENCE OF LEPTOSPIRA SEROVARS IN WILDLIFE AND LEPTOSPIRAL DNA IN WATER SOURCES IN A NATURAL AREA IN EAST-CENTRAL ILLINOIS, USA.
- Author
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Grimm, Kourtney, Rivera, Nelda A., Fredebaugh-Siller, Shannon, Weng, Hsin-Yi, Warner, Richard E., Maddox, Carol W., and Mateus-Pinilla, Nohra E.
- Abstract
We identified seven Leptospira serovars in wildlife and the presence of leptospiral DNA in water sources at a natural area within a fragmented habitat in Illinois, US. These serovars have been implicated in domestic animal and human leptospirosis, a reemerging zoonotic disease, whose reservoirs include wildlife and domestic animals. We live trapped medium-sized mammals (n=351) near building (H-sites) or forest sites (F-sites). Using serology, we evaluated exposure to Leptospira (L. interrogans serovars Autumnalis, Bratislava, Canicola, Icterohaemorrhagiae, Pomona; L. kirschneri serovar Grippotyphosa; L. borgpetersenii serovar Hardjo). Using PCR, we tested for the presence of leptospires in eight water samples (ponds, creeks, and rainwater runoff) collected near trapping sites. We identified antibody titers in raccoons (Procyon lotor; 121/221) and Virginia opossums (Didelphis virginiana; 60/112), but not in feral cats (Felis catus; 0/18). We found significant differences in overall Leptospira seroprevalence between years (P=0.043) and animal's age in 2008 (P=0.005) and 2009 (P=0.003). Serovars Autumnalis, Bratislava, and Grippotyphosa showed significant differences among age groups with the highest seroprevalence in adults. Females had a higher seroprevalence for Icterohaemorragiae in 2008 (P=0.003) and Hardjo in 2009 (P=0.041). Risk of exposure to Leptospira was higher at F-sites compared to H-sites (odds ratio 2.3, 95% confidence interval 1.3–3.9, P=0.002). We captured more animals with titers >1:800 at H-sites, but there was no association between titer levels and capture site. Six of eight water sources were Leptospira-positive; however, there was no correlation between trapping locations of seropositive animals and positive water sources. Natural areas create opportunities for interspecies interactions, favoring leptospires transmission across species. Understanding that Leptospira serovars are present in natural areas is an integral part of the safe human and pet recreational use of these areas. Our study should raise awareness and build on public education designed to prevent disease transmission between species. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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33. Albinism in Didelphis virginiana (Kerr, 1792): the first reported case in Mexico.
- Author
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Cuxim-Koyoc, Alan, Escalante-Avilés, Israel, Aragón-Pech, Rosendo, Pinto-Escalante, Doris, Reyes-Novelo, Enrique, and Ruiz-Piña, Hugo A.
- Subjects
- *
ALBINISM , *MELANINS , *MARSUPIALS , *SKIN , *HAIR - Abstract
Atypical colorations occur in different groups of vertebrates. The loss of melanin in the skin, hair and eyes is the result of an autosomal recessive genetic entity. It causes individuals to present with a white coloration of the skin and hair, as well as red eyes, known as albino. This manuscript documents the first record in Mexico of complete albinism in a marsupial, Didelphis virginiana, captured in the Yucatan peninsula. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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34. ANIMALES Y ESENCIAS COMPARTIDAS EN LOS CÓDICES MAYAS PREHISPÁNICOS: EL SIGNIFICADO DEL JEROGLÍFICO T572.
- Author
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Paxton, Merideth
- Abstract
Attempts to understand the spiritual connections of pre-Hispanic Mayans to the animals in their natural environments have long intrigued researchers, and various classificatory terms have resulted. One of these is co-essence which has been generally related to a hieroglyph (T572) in the codices, but not studied in detail there. The primary purpose of the present investigation is to better understand preconquest perceptions of nature by determining more precisely how this glyph functions. My method first involved finding the contexts of T572 in the three surviving pre-Hispanic codices with hieroglyphic texts, Codex Dresden, Codex Madrid (Codex Tro-Cortesianus), and Codex Paris. Secondly, I studied the accompanying texts and illustrations, definitions of Yucatec Mayan words, and reports by anthropologists, art historians, biologists, epigraphers, ethnobiologists, and ethnographers. I learned that T572 only occurs on pages 25-28 of the Dresden Codex, in the section on the ceremonies pertaining to the recycling of the haabs. Since these events were held during the 5-day uayeb at the ends of the haabs, I focused on the elaborately attired anthropomorphic opossums pertaining to them. Whereas previous researchers have seen the Dresden opossums only as directionally oriented bacab/pauahtuns, I have made the first detailed inquiry into the reason for the association. I have concluded that the illustrated creatures bear a close resemblance to living opossums, which have other characteristics appropriate for symbolizing the uayeb. Additionally, the opossums are participants in a group of co-essences with shared functions in the solar year. The hieroglyphic texts confirm that they are primarily aspects of solar time, not naguals. Moreover, the anthropomorphic Dresden opossums could also derive from physical similarities between humans and the animals as well as evidence in Yucatec Mayan dictionaries that humans were not always sharply distinguished from animals. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
35. HELMINTH COMMUNITY STRUCTURE OF THE GRAY FOUR-EYED OPOSSUM PHILANDER OPOSSUM (MAMMALIA: DIDELPHIDAE) IN THE NEOTROPICAL PORTION OF MEXICO.
- Author
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Angélica Ramírez-Cañas, Sara, George-Nascimento, Mario, García-Prieto, Luis, and Mata-López, Rosario
- Abstract
Studies on helminth communities associated with didelphids are scarce; the majority of works have focused at taxonomic level. To increase the ecological knowledge of these host–parasite associations, during March (dry season) of 3 consecutive years (2013–2015) a total of 49 adults of the gray foureyed opossum (Philander opossum) was collected in the Neotropical portion of Mexico (Agua Fría, Chiapas State) and examined for helminths. The main objectives of this study were to describe the infra- and component communities of helminths associated with P. opossum and to compare the helminth fauna of the Mexican population of this host species with those studied in French Guiana and in other Mexican terrestrial didelphids. The helminthological record of this host consisted of 12 species: 7 taxa of Nematoda, 3 of Trematoda, 1 Cestoda, and 1 Acanthocephala. Eight of the 12 taxa have been previously recorded in Didelphidae and 4 represent accidental infections (Glossocercus sp., Stomylotrema vicarium, Spirura mexicana and Acanthocephala gen. sp.). Diet of hosts is the main structuring factor of the communities (92% of the helminth species were recruited through ingestion). Forty-eight hosts were parasitized by at least 1 helminth species; Rhopalias coronatus was the most prevalent and abundant species in the hosts sampled. No significant differences were found in global prevalence among the helminth species present in all samplings, considering host sex and year. The dominance exerted by R. coronatus led to low values of evenness and diversity at both community levels. No significant differences were observed in composition of helminth species among the 3 sampling years regarding sex. The results of our study showed changes in helminth abundance at infracommunity level; during the first sampling these changes are explained by species with direct life cycle (Viannaia sp. and Cruzia tentaculata), whereas in last 2 surveys the explanation can be attributed to species with heteroxenous life cycles (particularly R. coronatus, Duboisiella proloba, and Turgida turgida). Thirty-three percent of the helminth species recorded in P. opossum in Agua Fría is shared with the other 2 terrestrial species of didelphids sampled in different sites of Mexico: Didelphis marsupialis and Didelphis virginiana. In contrast, samples from French Guiana and Agua Fría, differ in terms of helminth fauna, confirming that the helminth communities of opossum species inhabiting the same locality show higher levels of taxonomic similarity than communities of conspecific marsupials allopatrically distributed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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- View/download PDF
36. Biomonitoring Organochlorine Pesticides in Didelphis virginiana from Yucatan, Mexico by GC-ECD.
- Author
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Araujo-León, Jesús Alfredo, Mena-Rejón, Gonzalo J., Canché-Pool, Elsy B., and Ruiz-Piña, Hugo A.
- Subjects
ORGANOCHLORINE pesticides ,ENVIRONMENTAL monitoring ,VIRGINIA opossum ,GAS chromatography - Abstract
The aim of the present work was to apply a validated methodology for the detection of organochlorine pesticides in Didelphis virginiana (Virginia opossum) serum samples collected in Yucatan, Mexico. Recent studies performed to investigate the presence of Organochlorines (OCLs) in water, human blood and milk, and animal tissues from Yucatan have shown that the OCLs concentrations are high and can be associated with potential human health risk. Since opossum is considered an important synanthropic species in Yucatan, 40 opossum serum samples were analyzed by gas chromatography with electron capture detector. The most common OCLs found in opossum sera were lindanes, chlordanes, drines, and endosulfan. Heptachlor, heptachlor epoxide, and lindanes were found at the highest concentrations, while dichlorodiphenyl trichloroethane and its metabolites were found at the lowest concentrations in the samples. The good linearity, precision, and accuracy obtained in the evaluated parameters in the extraction and chromatographic methods support its application for the monitoring of OCLs pesticides in populations of opossums and other wild species in Yucatan. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. SARCOCYSTIS NEURONA–INDUCED MYELOENCEPHALITIS RELAPSE FOLLOWING ANTICOCCIDIAL TREATMENT.
- Author
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Hay, Alayna N., Witonsky, Sharon G., Lindsay, David S., LeRoith, Tanya, Jing Zhu, Kasmark, Leah, and Leeth, Caroline M.
- Abstract
Sarcocystis neurona is a ubiquitous parasite in the eastern United States, which is the principal causative agent in the neurologic disorder equine protozoal myeloencephalitis (EPM). While much is known about this protozoa’s life cycle in its natural host, the opossum (Didelphis virginiana), little is known of how it acts in the aberrant equine host, which displays a high incidence of exposure with a relatively low rate of morbidity. For this study, we employed the popular interferon gamma knockout mouse model to determine the potential for recrudescence of S. neurona infection after treatment with the anticoccidial drug diclazuril. Mice were infected with S. neurona merozoites, and 7-days post-infection (DPI) they were treated with diclazuril for 30 or 60 days or not treated at all. All infected non-treated mice developed neurologic signs consistent with S. neurona infection within 30 DPI. All diclazuril-treated infected mice remained clinically normal while on treatment but developed neurologic signs within 60 days of treatment cessation. Histological examination of cerebella from all infected mice demonstrated characteristic lesions of S. neurona infection, regardless of treatment status. Cerebellar samples collected from infected treated mice, displaying neurologic signs, produced viable S. neurona in culture. However, cerebellar samples collected from infected and neurologically normal mice at the end of a 30-day treatment period did not produce viable S. neurona in culture. Analysis of the humoral immune response in infected mice showed that during treatment IgM antibody production decreased, suggesting the organism was sequestered from immune surveillance. The cessation of treatment and subsequent development of neurologic disease resulted in increased IgM antibody production, suggesting recognition by the immune system at that time. Based on the study results the authors propose that diclazuril was able to inhibit the replication and migration of S. neurona but not fully eliminate the parasite, suggesting recrudescence of infection after treatment is possible. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. First molecular evidence of Toxoplasma gondii in opossums (Didelphis virginiana) from Yucatan, Mexico
- Author
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M. Torres-Castro, H. Noh-Pech, R. Puerto-Hernández, B. Reyes-Hernández, A. Panti-May, S. Hernández-Betancourt, A. Yeh-Gorocica, L. González-Herrera, J. Zavala-Castro, and F.I. Puerto
- Subjects
Didelphis virginiana ,Mexico ,Toxoplasma gondii ,Yucatan ,Zoology ,QL1-991 - Abstract
Toxoplasma gondii is an obligate intracellular parasite recognized as a causal agent of toxoplasmosis; zoonotic disease endemic in many countries worldwide, including Mexico. Different species of animals participate in the wild cycle infection, including opossums of the species Didelphis virginiana. Thirteen D. virginiana were captured in Yucatan, Mexico. Detection of T. gondii was achieved by Polymerase Chain Reaction, which determined an infection of 76.9% (10/13) in brains. Positive amplicons were sequenced for analysis, this produced results similar to T. gondii with identity and coverage values of 98% and 96-100%, respectively. This study presents the first molecular evidence of the circulation of T. gondii in D. virginiana from Mexico.
- Published
- 2016
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39. PHYSIOLOGICAL BASAL PARAMETERS OF FREE-RANGING OPOSSUMS (DIDELPHIS VIRGINIANA) IN THE YUCATAN PENINSULA, MEXICO.
- Author
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Haro, Paulina, Ruiz-Pina, Hugo A., Canché-Pool, Elsy B., Medina, Salvador, and Mercado, Julio A.
- Abstract
The aim of the present study is to determine the basal parameters in opossums (Didelphis virginiana) during physical examination in Yucatan, Mexico. Sixty-six opossums were captured and manually handled for physical examinations. Sex, age, cardiac and respiratory rate, body temperature, pulse, mucous membranes, capillary refill time, hydration, size of superficial lymph nodes, mental status, and body condition were evaluated. Also, comparisons between rectal and auricular temperatures were performed. The means of physiological parameters obtained were: cardiac frequency 146 beats per minute (95% confidence interval [CI]: 138.91-155.24), respiratory frequency 27.33 breaths per minute (95% CI: 25.15-29.64), and body temperature 34.018C (95% CI: 33.71-34.31). In 54% of animals, a sinus arrhythmia was present. A significant difference was found between rectal and auricular temperature measurements. A variation of 1.64 to 1.148C was obtained via the auricular thermometer compared with the rectal device. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. A Haplorhine First Metatarsal from the Middle Eocene of China
- Author
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Gebo, Daniel L., Dagosto, Marian, Beard, K. Christopher, Ni, Xijun, Qi, Tao, Tuttle, Russell H., editor, Fleagle, John G., editor, and Gilbert, Christopher C., editor
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
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41. Contemporary range expansion of the Virginia opossum ( Didelphis virginiana) impacted by humans and snow cover.
- Author
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Walsh, L.L. and Tucker, P.K.
- Subjects
- *
AGRICULTURE , *CLIMATE change , *VIRGINIA opossum , *POPULATION genetics , *POPULATION biology - Abstract
Range expansions are key demographic events driven by factors such as climate change and human intervention that ultimately influence the genetic composition of peripheral populations. The expansion of the Virginia opossum ( Didelphis virginiana Kerr, 1792) into Michigan has been documented over the past 200 years, indicating relatively new colonizations in northern Michigan. Although most contemporary expansions are a result of shifts in climate regimes, the opossum has spread beyond its hypothesized climate niche, offering an opportunity to examine the compounding influence that climate change and humans have on a species' distribution. The genetic consequences of two range expansions were investigated using genotypic data for nine microsatellite markers from opossums collected in Michigan, Ohio, and Wisconsin, USA. Two genetic clusters were identified: one on either side of Lake Michigan. Using general linear models, we found that measurements of genetic diversity across 15 counties are best explained by days of snow on the ground. Next best models incorporate anthropogenic covariates including farm density. These models suggest that opossum expansion may be facilitated by agricultural land development and at the same time be limited by their inability to forage in snow. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. PULMONARY LESIONS CAUSED BY THE LUNGWORM ( DIDELPHOSTRONGYLUS HAYESI) IN THE OPOSSUM ( DIDELPHIS VIRGINIANA) IN COLIMA, MEXICO.
- Author
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López-Crespo, Rubén A., López-Mayagoitia, Alfonso, Ramírez-Romero, Rafael, Martínez-Burnes, Julio, Prado-Rebolledo, Omar F., and García-Márquez, Luis J.
- Abstract
Didelphostrongylus hayesi is an important and prevalent pulmonary nematode in the opossum ( Didelphis virginiana). An in-depth description of the pulmonary lesions caused by this nematode is lacking. The objective of this investigation was to make a detailed account of the gross, subgross, and microscopic changes that occur in the lungs of opossums naturally infected with D. hayesi. Forty-four opossums trapped in the state of Colima, Mexico, were euthanized by an overdose of barbiturates. Following a postmortem examination, the right lung was cut from the main bronchi and placed in a Petri dish containing a saline solution for the detection and identification of live parasites. The left lung was fixed and cut serially for subgross microscopic examination and sections of lung were cut and stained for histopathologic examination. The most remarkable gross change in parasitized lungs was a poorly collapsible pulmonary parenchyma and mild emphysema. The right lung tested positive for lungworms on gross examination in 20/44, and 11/44 (25%) of the left lungs showed tan nodules on the pleural surface. Microscopically, the bronchi of 20/44 animals harbored adult and larval stages of D. hayesi (left lung), the same 20 opossums from which nematodes were grossly evident at necropsy (right lung). Adults and larvae were present in bronchi, bronchioles, and alveoli mixed with desquamated cells and many eosinophils, and to a lesser extent neutrophils, alveolar macrophages, and giant cells. Bronchi and bronchioles exhibited goblet cell hyperplasia and metaplasia respectively, and infiltration of lymphoplasmacytic cells in the interstitium and lamina propria. The tan nodules consisted of focal alveolar endogenous lipidosis, which likely resulted from parasitic airway obstruction. The lungs of 3/20 parasitized opossums also showed alveolar bronchiolization (Lambertosis). The absence of Eucoleus aerophilus or bacterial pneumonia incriminates D. hayesi as the putative cause of pulmonary lesions in these opossums. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Spontaneous neoplasms in captive Virginia opossums (Didelphis virginiana): a retrospective case series (1989–2014) and review of the literature.
- Author
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Pope, Jenny P. and Donnell, Robert L.
- Subjects
VIRGINIA opossum ,SQUAMOUS cell carcinoma ,DISEASES - Abstract
This retrospective project summarizes the types of neoplasms identified in Virginia opossums (Didelphis virginiana) presented to the University of Tennessee, College of Veterinary Medicine (UTCVM) postmortem service in 1989–2014 and serves as a review of the literature. Of the 85 Virginia opossums identified from the UTCVM case database, there were 17 diagnoses of neoplasia from 12 cases (14%). These cases included 8 females, 2 males, and 2 neutered males. All opossums with known ages (11 of 12) were >2 y old. Pulmonary tumors, specifically minimally invasive or lepidic-predominant adenocarcinomas, were the most common diagnosis and accounted for 53% (9 of 17) of the neoplasms. Additional tumors included acute myeloid leukemia with eosinophil maturation, hepatic hemangiosarcoma, sarcoma (unknown origin), squamous cell carcinoma, disseminated mast cell tumor, trichoblastoma, thyroid adenoma, and an osteoma. These findings serve as a reference for the types of spontaneous neoplasms in Virginia opossums; based on these findings, neoplasia should be considered as a differential in mature captive Virginia opossums. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Estimating Relative Distribution of Raccoons, Opossums, Skunks, and Foxes Using Animal Control Data
- Author
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Christine Klinkowski-Clark, Michael J. Kutilek, John O. Matson, Paula Messina, Kevin Earley, and Shannon M. Bros-Seemann
- Subjects
animal control ,didelphis virginiana ,gis ,human–wildlife conflicts ,mephitis mephitis ,procyon lotor ,sampling ,spilogale putorius ,wildlife hotline ,urocyon cinereoargenteus ,vulpes vulpes ,Environmental sciences ,GE1-350 ,General. Including nature conservation, geographical distribution ,QH1-199.5 - Abstract
We used indices of animal control reports per capita and areas of land covers to assess the relative habitat-use of raccoons (Procyon lotor), opossums (Didelphis virginiana), skunks (Spilogale putorius and Mephitis mephitis), and foxes (Vulpes vulpes and Urocyon cinereoargenteus). We used confirmed (hereafter, verified) calls made to Brevard Animal Services, Florida, and assessed potential human demographic influences associated with unconfirmed (hereafter, unverified) reports where it was uncertain whether or not an animal was present. To estimate habitat use, we performed quadrat sampling using a geographic information system (GIS) and obtained areas of land cover within each quadrat. We evaluated numbers of confirmed animals per capita against areas of land cover in a quadrat using Forward Logistic Regression and Stepwise Multiple Linear Regression analyses. Our results indicate that raccoons were positively associated with a mixture of populated areas near streams and negatively associated with wetland forests, shrub and brushland, and tree crops. Opossums were positively associated with a mixture of row crops, bays and estuaries, highdensity residential areas, and streams, while negatively associated with golf courses and lowdensity residential areas. Skunks were associated with a mixture of residential, institutional, and recreational areas, roads, pastures, and wetlands with some forest cover near water. Foxes were positively associated with open agricultural- and industrial-use areas often located near bays and estuaries, and negatively associated with golf courses, extraction sites, and shrub and brushland areas. On a landscape level, animal groups selected certain land cover categories and did not use land covers based on availability. If care is taken to remove potential biases, verified animal control reports can be used as a low-cost, opportunistic method to determine where raccoons, opossums, skunks, and foxes are located in urban areas. Using verified animal control reports appears promising for identifying areas where raccoons, opossums, skunks, and foxes are located in urban areas.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. INFECTION BY Rickettsia felis IN OPOSSUMS (Didelphis sp.) FROM YUCATAN, MEXICO
- Author
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Gaspar PENICHE-LARA, Hugo A. RUIZ-PIÑA, Enrique REYES-NOVELO, Karla DZUL-ROSADO, and Jorge ZAVALA-CASTRO
- Subjects
Rickettsia felis ,gltA ,17 kDa ,Transmission cycle ,Didelphis marsupialis ,Didelphis virginiana ,Yucatan ,Arctic medicine. Tropical medicine ,RC955-962 ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
Rickettsia felis is an emergent pathogen and the causative agent of a typhus-like rickettsiosis in the Americas. Its transmission cycle involves fleas as biological vectors (mainly Ctenocephalides felis) and multiple domestic and synanthropic mammal hosts. Nonetheless, the role of mammals in the cycle of R. felis is not well understood and many efforts are ongoing in different countries of America to clarify it. The present study describes for the first time in Mexico the infection of two species of opossum (Didelphis virginiana and D. marsupialis) by R. felis. A diagnosis was carried out from blood samples by molecular methods through the gltA and 17 kDa genes and sequence determination. Eighty-seven opossum samples were analyzed and 28 were found to be infected (32.1%) from five out of the six studied localities of Yucatan. These findings enable recognition of the potential epidemiological implications for public health of the presence of infected synanthropic Didelphis in households.
- Published
- 2016
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46. References
- Author
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Krause, William J., Beck, F., editor, Brown, D., editor, Christ, B., editor, Kriz, W., editor, Marani, E., editor, Putz, R., editor, Sano, Y., editor, Schiebler, T. H., editor, Zilles, K., editor, and Krause, William J.
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Presence of Virginia opossum (Didelphis virginiana) and Pic (Triatoma dimidiata) infected with Trypanosoma cruzi in urban areas: preliminary evaluation in the city of Campeche, Mexico.
- Author
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Tamay-Segovia, Paulino, Blum-Domínguez, Selene C., Núñez-Oreza, Luis A., Martínez-Hernández, Fernando, Gómez-Solano, Mónica I., Maldonado-Velázquez, María G., and Retana-Guiascón, Oscar G.
- Subjects
VIRGINIA opossum ,TRIATOMA ,TRYPANOSOMA cruzi ,MARSUPIALS ,DISEASE vectors - Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Influence of habitat attributes on density of Virginia opossums (Didelphis virginiana) in agricultural ecosystems.
- Author
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Beatty, William S., Beasley, James C., Olson, Zachary H., and Rhodes Jr., Olin E.
- Subjects
- *
AGRICULTURAL landscape management , *ANIMAL population density , *ANIMAL population estimates , *POISSON distribution , *VIRGINIA opossum - Abstract
In agriculturally fragmented ecosystems, mesopredators play dominant roles in food webs through scavenging. We examined the influence of habitat attributes associated with carrion on local Virginia opossum (Didelphis virginiana Kerr, 1792) density in an agricultural landscape. We conducted opossum mark-recapture in 25 forest patches from 2005 to 2010, which represented the most extensive sampling of opossums to date.Weanalyzed mark-recapture data with a closed robust design and evaluated effects of landscape features linked to carrion on opossum density and female opossum density with generalized linear mixed-effects models. We included landscape-level (1481.6 m buffer) and patch-level covariates linked to carrion in addition to other covariates associated with high opossum densities. We developed a set of 19 candidate models and examined model fit with Akaike's information criterion. The top model for opossum density included the density of adjoining roads, whereas the top model for female density included patch size, although the statistical null was a competing model in both cases. The long-distance dispersal capability and generalist diet of the opossum likely precluded us from detecting a definitive relationship between covariates and opossum density. The scale of effect for opossum density in agriculturally fragmented landscapes is likely larger than the spatial scales examined here. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Metal accumulation in wild-caught opossum.
- Author
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Lockhart, J., Siddiqui, Samreen, Loughry, W., and Bielmyer-Fraser, Gretchen
- Subjects
BIOACCUMULATION ,VIRGINIA opossum ,NINE-banded armadillo ,HEAVY metal toxicology ,LIVER ,BIOINDICATORS ,MAMMALS - Abstract
The Virginia opossum ( Didelphis virginiana) is widespread in the USA, ranging south through Latin America. The ecology of opossums is such that they are in frequent contact with soils, suggesting that they may function as a valuable bioindicator for chemical contamination in terrestrial environments. Surprisingly, there have been virtually no toxicology studies on opossums. Here, we provide the first analysis of metal contaminants in opossum liver tissues. Liver samples were obtained from 471 opossums, collected from 2003 to 2006, at four sites in North Florida and South Georgia, USA, and concentrations of copper, lead, nickel, selenium, and zinc were measured. We found little evidence of age differences in the concentration of any of the metals. However, there were at least some significant differences between years, males and females, and between sites for each metal, although the pattern of these differences was not always consistent across metals. Concentrations of metals in liver tissue were positively correlated with one another, primarily of each metal (except Pb) with zinc. Reference levels of metal contaminants are not available for opossums, but concentrations of Cu, Ni, Pb, and Zn in our samples were for the most part significantly higher than those reported from liver tissues of nine-banded armadillos ( Dasypus novemcinctus) collected at the same sites and in the same years. Data from other small mammals studied elsewhere further indicate that metal concentrations in opossums were high, but at this time, it is not possible to determine if these elevated levels generated toxicity. The substantial temporal and spatial variation we found in metal concentrations suggests that determination of baseline levels for opossums may not be straightforward. Nonetheless, this is the first study quantifying metal accumulation in the livers of Didelphis virginiana and, as such, provides an important starting point for future research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Reproduction in the Gray Short-Tailed Opossum, Monodelphis domestica
- Author
-
Moore, H. D. M. and Hamlett, William C., editor
- Published
- 1992
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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