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Journal of Wildlife Diseases, 32(1), 1996, pp. 31-38
© Wildlife Disease Association  1996
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The possible importance of wintering yards in the transmission of Parelaphostrongylus tenuis to white-tailed deer and moose

MW Lankester and WJ Peterson


ABSTRACT

Terrestrial gastropods were collected, 15 June to 25 November 1994, from beneath cardboard sheets on deer range in northeastern Minnesota (USA) and examined individually for larvae of Parelaphostrongylus tenuis, the meningeal worm of white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus). Overall, 10 (0.08%) of 12,096 snails and slugs were infected with a mean (+/- SD) of 3.2 +/- 2.5 P. tenuis larvae. The prevalence of infection in gastropods was greater in a traditional deer wintering yard (seven of 4,401, 0.16%), where deer aggregated for almost 5 months at a density of 50/km2, than on summer range (three of 7,695, 0.04%) where they occurred at 4/km2. Despite relatively low densities of infected gastropods, their ingestion purely by chance remains a tenable explanation for the high prevalence of P. tenuis infection observed in white-tailed deer.


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J. D. Rogerson, W. S. Fairbanks, and L. Cornicelli
ECOLOGY OF GASTROPOD AND BIGHORN SHEEP HOSTS OF LUNGWORM ON ISOLATED, SEMIARID MOUNTAIN RANGES IN UTAH, USA
J. Wildl. Dis., January 1, 2008; 44(1): 28 - 44.
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Copyright © 1996 by the Wildlife Disease Association.