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1 n, associated with suppurative infections in domestic animals.
2  conditions and may enhance muscle growth in domestic animals.
3 ecies, 12 from 61 wild animals, and ten from domestic animals.
4 pecies, and potentially between wildlife and domestic animals.
5  through the transmission of rabies virus to domestic animals.
6 onatal morbidity and mortality in humans and domestic animals.
7 ibute to frequent misdiagnoses in humans and domestic animals.
8 netic relatedness with those from humans and domestic animals.
9 ped into humans multiple times from wild and domestic animals.
10 osis cases annually and significantly impact domestic animals.
11 s and antimicrobial-resistant organisms from domestic animals.
12 ead food animal production, and free-roaming domestic animals.
13 murium lineages circulating among humans and domestic animals.
14 ases with significant mortality in humans or domestic animals.
15 dered as potentially high risk to humans and domestic animals.
16 isease affecting millions of individuals and domestic animals.
17 nchronized strain surveillance in humans and domestic animals.
18 the domestication syndrome observed in other domestic animals.
19 ies is to implement vaccination programs for domestic animals.
20 n humans and a welfare and economic issue in domestic animals.
21 as sleeping sickness in humans and nagana in domestic animals.
22 al to humans and also pose a serious risk to domestic animals.
23 ing since it is more valuable than meat from domestic animals.
24 mes cause devastating diseases in humans and domestic animals.
25 ve the most frequent contact with humans and domestic animals.
26 orts might reduce transmission to humans and domestic animals.
27 onsequently, likely affect their mixing with domestic animals.
28 s and subsequent evolution and demography of domestic animals.
29 ial relevance to the welfare of group-housed domestic animals.
30 type B causes enteritis and enterotoxemia in domestic animals.
31  are caused by pathogens shared with wild or domestic animals.
32 r necrotizing enteritis and enterotoxemia in domestic animals.
33 human miscarriage, yet is rarely reported in domestic animals.
34 hesis that have been described in humans and domestic animals.
35 al disease in humans and in horses and other domestic animals.
36 -celled apicomplexan parasites of humans and domestic animals.
37 al disease in humans and in horses and other domestic animals.
38 nesis of C. perfringens type B infections in domestic animals.
39  genome-assisted breeding of sheep and other domestic animals.
40 smission cycle (in wild animals) and that in domestic animals.
41 ons, including enterotoxemias, in humans and domestic animals.
42 irus, are widespread pathogens of humans and domestic animals.
43 for most Salmonella infections in humans and domestic animals.
44 ship with humans, going beyond that of other domestic animals.
45 that induces chronic infection in humans and domestic animals.
46 to E) with gastrointestinal (GI) diseases in domestic animals.
47 -site sanitation coverage; (2) determine how domestic animals affect fecal contamination; and (3) ass
48 ikely that increases in mite, cockroach, and domestic animal allergens have been sufficient to explai
49 nsitive detection and quantitation of common domestic animal and bird species DNA from complex biomat
50 es are reservoirs of pathogens that threaten domestic animal and human health; second, wildlife EIDs
51 grated One Health approach, targeting human, domestic animal and wildlife interfaces, provide modern
52 ll often need to be integrated across human, domestic animal and wildlife populations.
53 ogen that causes abortion and infertility in domestic animals and a severe debilitating febrile illne
54   The toxins cause several fatal diseases in domestic animals and are associated with esophageal canc
55 parasites worldwide, infecting many wild and domestic animals and causing zoonotic infections in huma
56                   Gene flow between incoming domestic animals and closely related indigenous wild spe
57 lates, which cause rapidly fatal diseases in domestic animals and enteritis necroticans in humans, co
58  This indicates exposure risk for humans and domestic animals and highlights that this pathogen can c
59 contributed to rapid phenotypic evolution in domestic animals and how alleles in domestic animals may
60 ecies disease transmission between wildlife, domestic animals and humans is an increasing threat to p
61 fication of markers in homologous regions in domestic animals and humans, which may be utilized to as
62 ity of oligosaccharides in whey samples from domestic animals and humans.
63  and pervasive reproductive problems in both domestic animals and humans.
64  is an important mosquito-borne pathogen for domestic animals and humans.
65  in a broad context of contemporary wild and domestic animals and humans.
66 iated with loci controlling stature in other domestic animals and in humans.
67 ses a global health problem in livestock and domestic animals and is an emerging problem in humans.
68 rldwide zoonotic disease causing abortion in domestic animals and Malta fever in humans.
69 on's vector mosquitoes feed predominantly on domestic animals and only secondarily on human beings, t
70 may occur in other social mammals, including domestic animals and primates.
71 is threatened simultaneously by disease from domestic animals and rapid changes in food availability
72 nt bacteria among children with exposures to domestic animals and their waste in the household enviro
73 key determinant of infection risk in humans, domestic animals and threatened wildlife.
74  for instance, in the relative importance of domestic animals and wild primates as sources.
75 rimental effects on the health of humans and domestic animals, and diminished recreational value of w
76 cal implications for the health of wildlife, domestic animals, and humans.
77          Ticks are ectoparasites of wild and domestic animals, and humans.
78 esia species infect a wide array of wild and domestic animals, and many of the immunologic and pathol
79 za viruses as worldwide pathogens in humans, domestic animals, and poultry is well recognized.
80 sistence of ehrlichial infections in humans, domestic animals, and reservoir hosts.
81 anaging complex interactions between humans, domestic animals, and wild animals can we sustain natura
82 mising vaccine candidates to protect humans, domestic animals, and wildlife from fatal disease outcom
83 za A viruses are major pathogens for humans, domestic animals, and wildlife, and these viruses occasi
84 za A viruses are major pathogens for humans, domestic animals, and wildlife.
85 onments, influencing transmission to people, domestic animals, and wildlife.
86  economic impact of type C-induced diseases, domestic animals are commonly vaccinated with crude type
87                                Consequently, domestic animals are commonly vaccinated, at varying eff
88 ted marker in urban slum environments, where domestic animals are exposed to human feces that have be
89 tions, but their prevalence and functions in domestic animals are largely unexplored.
90                                              Domestic animals are sensitive to human cues that facili
91                            Humans have moved domestic animals around the globe for thousands of years
92 nd commentary focusing on companion and peri-domestic animals as disease risk for humans, taking into
93 obial surveillance that include wildlife and domestic animals as well as humans, and recognition that
94 ishment of agricultural economies based upon domestic animals began independently in many parts of th
95 visions to bacteria isolated from normal non-domestic animal body sites are mentioned.
96 logical remains such as charcoal, seeds, and domestic animal bones suggest that people have inhabited
97 breeding loops, which are frequently seen in domestic animal breeding.
98                          Dogs were the first domestic animal, but little is known about their populat
99 tic, with spillover infections of humans and domestic animals, but a few such as chikungunya virus (C
100                                              Domestic animals can be cloned using techniques such as
101                          Viruses of wild and domestic animals can infect humans in a process called z
102 but less well-studied is the ease with which domestic animals can manipulate their human caregivers t
103 es of particularly inbred individuals and of domestic animals can skew estimates of genome-wide heter
104 istinct host species, which included humans, domestic animals (Canis lupus familiaris, Ovis aries, Ga
105  subjects watched video clips of spiders and domestic animals (confrontation phase) after being prime
106 dreds of human deaths, and more than 100,000 domestic animal deaths.
107 y samples from cases of rabies in humans and domestic animals diagnosed in Venezuela between 1990 and
108  evidence by 3,000 years and suggesting that domestic animal economies reached the mountains of inter
109 uce the risk of human infection by excluding domestic animals, especially infected dogs, from bedroom
110 ckground, tame behavior in rabbits and other domestic animals evolved by shifts in allele frequencies
111 99 fecal samples from 600 children and 1,871 domestic animal fecal samples from 376 of the same house
112              The interaction of humans, live domestic animals for sale, food products, and wild and s
113 CoV-2's RBD, we screened serum from wild and domestic animals for the presence of antibodies against
114 e has opened a new opportunity to manipulate domestic animal genomes via homologous recombination.
115                                   Myiasis in domestic animals has been studied more extensively, but
116 und healing; however, their equivalents from domestic animals have received less attention as an alte
117 ealth continues to be dominated by human and domestic animal health experts.
118 ety of paramyxoviruses that impact human and domestic animal health when spillover occurs.
119 y viruses that are significant for human and domestic animal health, but the dynamics of these infect
120 ibodies against both GI and GII human NVs in domestic animals highlights the importance of further st
121 ortion or congenital disease in a variety of domestic animal hosts.
122 demographic and dispersal history of GETV in domestic animals in China and to explore the impact of e
123        Our results provide new evidence that domestic animals in the household environment contribute
124  other clinical syndromes of both humans and domestic animals; in this strain the polysialic acid cap
125 ing honeybees as well as novel bacteria from domestic animals including an alpha-hemolytic Streptococ
126 y associated with clostridial GI diseases in domestic animals, including necrotic enteritis in piglet
127 he climate sensitivity of European human and domestic animal infectious pathogens, and the characteri
128 tory methods to characterize areas with wild-domestic animal interactions.
129 tions; and (iii) EIDs with no overt human or domestic animal involvement.
130 llover from reservoir populations of wild or domestic animals is essential for the effective deployme
131 en can be zoonotic, yet the exposure risk of domestic animals living in close proximity to young chil
132                                 Contact with domestic animals, mainly dogs and cats increases a risk
133    Identifying genomic areas of selection in domestic animals may aid in the detection of genomic are
134    As in humans, renal and hepatic health in domestic animals may be sensitive to long-term PFAS expo
135                          However, humans and domestic animals may be sequentially exposed to differen
136 ution in domestic animals and how alleles in domestic animals may evolve by the accumulation of multi
137                                 For example, domestic animals may start and end their play behaviour
138 uman African sleeping sickness and nagana in domestic animals, myo-inositol is taken up via a specifi
139 scribe the coronaviral landscape of wild and domestic animals (n = 889; 27 species) in the Northeaste
140  of the historical development of cloning in domestic animals, of its application to the propagation
141 KV can be found by evaluating arboviruses in domestic animals, of which there are at least seven NT v
142 ay be spatially dependent, such as spread by domestic animals or through aerosolization.
143 ogenically modified habitats, feed on either domestic animals or wildlife occurring in high density,
144 ure has played in influencing the genomes of domestic animals over the past 10000 years.
145                            A survey elicited domestic animal ownership and participants were examined
146 -scale or "backyard" food animal production, domestic animal ownership, and practices related to anim
147 ensity and coverage, population density, and domestic animal ownership.
148 en associated with unsafe drinking water and domestic animal ownership.
149 imal pathogens, causing serious outbreaks in domestic animals, particularly in sheep, with high econo
150                                    Regarding domestic animals, pastoral practices and animal behaviou
151 me-based water treatment, and containment of domestic animals), plus community-level interventions (s
152 elate these trends to changes in climate and domestic animal populations.
153 reventing the spread of this bacterium among domestic animal populations.
154 hinitis in swine and pasteurellosis in other domestic animals, produces an extracellular polysacchari
155 ucing the abundance of their hosts; however, domestic animal production and complex life cycles can m
156 gation into the bacteria associated with non-domestic animals provides important information for reco
157 re, we describe additions of novel taxa from domestic animals published in 2022 that are validly publ
158 se among mongooses and between mongooses and domestic animals remain poorly understood.
159 The recovery of Early Iron Age artefacts and domestic animal remains from hunter-gatherer contexts at
160 hallenges due to the involvement of wild and domestic animal reservoirs.
161 munomodulation have been previously shown in domestic animals, sex-specific immune modulation using r
162 of new and revised taxa originating from non-domestic animal species continues to be pursued.
163 tion summarizing new and revised taxa in non-domestic animal species in the Journal of Clinical Micro
164 iant catalog for a major and highly athletic domestic animal species will enhance its ability to serv
165  following infection of susceptible wild and domestic animal species.
166 mic impact by causing rapid death of several domestic animal species.
167               This investigation examined 10 domestic animal stool samples (8 mammalian, 2 avian) con
168                        Results from wild and domestic animal studies suggest new models to investigat
169 ier introductions, which consisted mostly of domestic animals, the invasive rabbits had wild ancestry
170 ions and limits the rate of muscle growth in domestic animals, the proteolytic system responsible for
171  the most dangerous pathogens for humans and domestic animals, their monoxenous relatives have freque
172 lective and molecular mechanisms that enable domestic animals to re-adapt to the wild and provide imp
173 ight the concern for pathogen spillover from domestic animals to wildlife but also identify an opport
174 : (i) EIDs associated with "spill-over" from domestic animals to wildlife populations living in proxi
175 sues at the intersection of people, wild and domestic animals, together with their changing environme
176 so met all criteria except for exceeding the domestic animal toxicity limit for shoot accumulation of
177  humans and enteritis and enterotoxaemias of domestic animals, typically produce (at minimum) beta to
178 fecal contamination because of the number of domestic animals usually roaming in the alleys and the l
179                             Owners and their domestic animals via skin shedding and secretions, mutua
180 f those not receiving RPEP), often because a domestic animal was unavailable for observation or testi
181  occurrence of rabies spillover from bats to domestic animals was also demonstrated.
182                                        Thus, domestic animals were important contributors to enteric
183 rectly-from them to other species, including domestic animals, wild mammals, and humans, where they c
184                               Vaccination of domestic animals with chemically inactivated foot-and-mo
185  ticks and sandflies) to humans and wild and domestic animals, with the largest burden on global publ

 
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