Culling and cattle controls influence tuberculosis risk for badgers.
about
Why infectious disease research needs community ecologyBeyond contact-based transmission networks: the role of spatial coincidence.The Wild Side of Disease Control at the Wildlife-Livestock-Human Interface: A ReviewExploration of the power of routine surveillance data to assess the impacts of industry-led badger culling on bovine tuberculosis incidence in cattle herds.The performance of approximations of farm contiguity compared to contiguity defined using detailed geographical information in two sample areas in Scotland: implications for foot-and-mouth disease modellingThe duration of the effects of repeated widespread badger culling on cattle tuberculosis following the cessation of culling.Inference of the infection status of individuals using longitudinal testing data from cryptic populations: Towards a probabilistic approach to diagnosis.Badger responses to small-scale culling may compromise targeted control of bovine tuberculosis.Local cattle and badger populations affect the risk of confirmed tuberculosis in British cattle herds.Culling-induced changes in badger (Meles meles) behaviour, social organisation and the epidemiology of bovine tuberculosisImpact of external sources of infection on the dynamics of bovine tuberculosis in modelled badger populationsComparing badger (Meles meles) management strategies for reducing tuberculosis incidence in cattle.Direction of association between bite wounds and Mycobacterium bovis infection in badgers: implications for transmission.The effect of badger culling on breakdown prolongation and recurrence of bovine tuberculosis in cattle herds in Great Britain.The contribution of badgers to confirmed tuberculosis in cattle in high-incidence areas in England.Biosecurity on cattle farms: a study in north-west England.Localized reactive badger culling increases risk of bovine tuberculosis in nearby cattle herds.Interactions between density, home range behaviors, and contact rates in the Channel Island fox (Urocyon littoralis).Mycobacterium bovis shedding patterns from experimentally infected calves and the effect of concurrent infection with bovine viral diarrhoea virusSpatial Targeting for Bovine Tuberculosis Control: Can the Locations of Infected Cattle Be Used to Find Infected Badgers?Mycobacterium bovis: A Model Pathogen at the Interface of Livestock, Wildlife, and HumansHerd-level bovine tuberculosis risk factors: assessing the role of low-level badger population disturbanceParasite responses to large mammal loss in an African savanna.Evidence-based control of canine rabies: a critical review of population density reduction.Epidemiology caught in the causal web of bovine tuberculosis.Bovine Tuberculosis Risk Factors for British Herds Before and After the 2001 Foot-and-Mouth Epidemic: What have we Learned from the TB99 and CCS2005 Studies?Disease Control in Wildlife: Evaluating a Test and Cull Programme for Bovine Tuberculosis in African Buffalo.Control and eradication of tuberculosis in cattle: a systematic review of economic evidence.A review of risk factors for bovine tuberculosis infection in cattle in the UK and Ireland.Modeling landscape-scale pathogen spillover between domesticated and wild hosts: Asian soybean rust and kudzu.A long-term observational study of the impact of badger removal on herd restrictions due to bovine TB in the Irish midlands during 1989--2004.Diminishing returns in bovine tuberculosis control.Badgers prefer cattle pasture but avoid cattle: implications for bovine tuberculosis control.Mortality trajectory analysis reveals the drivers of sex-specific epidemiology in natural wildlife-disease interactions.Estimates for local and movement-based transmission of bovine tuberculosis in British cattle.Ecological and anthropogenic drivers of rabies exposure in vampire bats: implications for transmission and control.Culling-induced social perturbation in Eurasian badgers Meles meles and the management of TB in cattle: an analysis of a critical problem in applied ecology.Farm-scale risk factors for bovine tuberculosis incidence in cattle herds during the Randomized Badger Culling Trial.Identifying genotype specific elevated-risk areas and associated herd risk factors for bovine tuberculosis spread in British cattle.A modelling framework based on MDP to coordinate farmers' disease control decisions at a regional scale.
P2860
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P2860
Culling and cattle controls influence tuberculosis risk for badgers.
description
2006 nî lūn-bûn
@nan
2006 թուականի Հոկտեմբերին հրատարակուած գիտական յօդուած
@hyw
2006 թվականի հոտեմբերին հրատարակված գիտական հոդված
@hy
2006年の論文
@ja
2006年論文
@yue
2006年論文
@zh-hant
2006年論文
@zh-hk
2006年論文
@zh-mo
2006年論文
@zh-tw
2006年论文
@wuu
name
Culling and cattle controls influence tuberculosis risk for badgers.
@ast
Culling and cattle controls influence tuberculosis risk for badgers.
@en
type
label
Culling and cattle controls influence tuberculosis risk for badgers.
@ast
Culling and cattle controls influence tuberculosis risk for badgers.
@en
prefLabel
Culling and cattle controls influence tuberculosis risk for badgers.
@ast
Culling and cattle controls influence tuberculosis risk for badgers.
@en
P2093
P2860
P356
P1476
Culling and cattle controls influence tuberculosis risk for badgers.
@en
P2093
Chris L Cheeseman
David R Cox
F John Bourne
George Gettinby
Helen E Jenkins
John P McInerney
Peter Gilks
R Glyn Hewinson
Richard J Delahay
Richard S Clifton-Hadley
P2860
P304
14713-14717
P356
10.1073/PNAS.0606251103
P407
P577
2006-10-02T00:00:00Z