2 results match your criteria: "Arbeitskreis Wildbiologie an der Justus-Liebig-Universität e.V.[Affiliation]"
Arch Virol
November 2018
Musée National d'Histoire Naturelle, 25, rue Münster, 2160, Luxembourg, Luxembourg.
European populations of free-living wildcats have been shown to be exposed to cat viruses. Luxembourg has a high degree of habitat fragmentation, and hybridisation rates between domestic cats and wildcats are high. We therefore assessed the seroprevalence of six viruses in 34 serum samples collected between 2001 and 2016 from wildcats in Luxembourg.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBerl Munch Tierarztl Wochenschr
October 2006
Arbeitskreis Wildbiologie an der Justus-Liebig-Universität e.V., An-Institut des Fachbereichs Veterinärmedizin.
European mouflon are in the focus of research since they were brought from the Tyrrhenic islands to the European mainland a hundred years ago. From the beginning many populations on European mainland suffer from different claw diseases which are unknown in their original habitats. Foot rot, the ovine purulent laminitis, whose existence im wild ruminants was negotiated some years before, furthermore claw alterations caused by primary or secondary lack of trace elements similar to the copper deficiency syndrome of the boreal deer species moose and reindeer and finally horn hyperplasia with a genetic background are found as main claw diseases in Central Europe.
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