Publications by authors named "Alasdair M Veitch"

Background: Onchocerca cervipedis is a filarioid nematode of cervids reported from Central America to boreal regions of North America. It is found primarily in subcutaneous tissues of the legs, and is more commonly known as 'legworm'. Blackflies are intermediate hosts and transmit larvae to ungulates when they blood-feed.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Pathogens can cause serious declines in host species, and knowing where pathogens associated with host declines occur facilitates understanding host-pathogen ecology. Suspected drivers of global amphibian declines include infectious diseases, with 2 pathogens in particular, Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis (Bd) and ranaviruses, causing concern. We explored the host range and geographic distribution of Bd and ranaviruses in the Taiga Plains ecoregion of the Northwest Territories, Canada, in 2007 and 2008.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Domestic animal health services in Canada's Northwest Territories are provided through various means, including private vets in a few communities, and alternative methods like mail-order and free clinics in others.
  • An evaluation in the Sahtu Settlement Area involved free clinics for dogs and surveys of dog owners and students, revealing low rates of neutering (20%), rabies vaccinations (37%), and deworming (29%), along with concerning health conditions in the dogs examined.
  • Owners and youths expressed a need for better animal health services, suggesting that future efforts should build on current programs and involve community collaboration to enhance relevance and sustainability.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Many northern Canadians have continued a subsistence lifestyle of wildlife harvesting and, therefore, value sustainable wildlife populations. At a regional wildlife workshop in the Sahtu Settlement Area, Northwest Territories in 2002, elders and community leaders raised concerns regarding wildlife health, food safety, and the effects of climate change on wildlife. They requested that efforts be put toward training youth in science and increasing involvement of hunters and youth in wildlife research.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Climate change is influencing the structure and function of natural ecosystems around the world, including host-parasite interactions and disease emergence. Understanding the influence of climate change on infectious disease at temperate and tropical latitudes can be challenging because of numerous complicating biological, social, and political factors. Arctic and Subarctic regions may be particularly good models for unraveling the impacts of climate change on parasite ecology because they are relatively simple systems with low biological diversity and few other complicating anthropogenic factors.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Fire has been a key disturbance in boreal America, creating a spatial mosaic that significantly influences the density of snowshoe hares, as different areas have varying amounts of early successional plants due to fire.
  • This study supports the idea that fire shapes geographic variations in natural selection, particularly where hare populations are high and have strongly influenced the defense mechanisms of juvenile woody plants like Alaska and white birch.
  • The research indicates that there is a transcontinental link between the interactions of fire, hares, and plant defenses, with higher levels of defense toxins found in Alaskan hares compared to those in Wisconsin, suggesting a potential coevolutionary dynamic.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The North is a frontier for exploration of emerging infectious diseases and the large-scale drivers influencing distribution, host associations, and evolution of pathogens among persons, domestic animals, and wildlife. Leading into the International Polar Year 2007-2008, we outline approaches, protocols, and empirical models derived from a decade of integrated research on northern host-parasite systems. Investigations of emerging infectious diseases associated with parasites in northern wildlife involved a network of multidisciplinary collaborators and incorporated geographic surveys, archival collections, historical foundations for diversity, and laboratory and field studies exploring the interface for hosts, parasites, and the environment.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Molecular identification of dorsal-spined larvae (DSL) from fecal samples indicates that the protostrongylid parasite Parelaphostrongylus odocoilei occupies a broader geographic range in western North America than has been previously reported. We analyzed 2,124 fecal samples at 29 locations from thinhorn sheep (Ovis dalli dalli and O. d.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Examining both spatial and temporal variation can provide insights into population limiting factors. We investigated the relative spatial and temporal changes in range use and mortality within the Red Wine Mountains caribou herd, a population that declined by approximately 75% from the 1980s to the 1990s. To extract the spatial structure of the population, we applied fuzzy cluster analysis, a method which assigns graded group membership, to space use of radio-tracked adult females, and compared these results to a hard classification based on sums-of-squares agglomerative clustering.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF