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1 teway for arbovirus spillback from humans to wildlife.
2 threats to humans, livestock, and endangered wildlife.
3  the likelihood of adverse health effects in wildlife.
4 ubstances will have serious consequences for wildlife.
5 e range of companion animals, livestock, and wildlife.
6 k in humans, domestic animals and threatened wildlife.
7 ts, and other adverse outcomes in humans and wildlife.
8 s has led to significant concerns for marine wildlife.
9  production and forage available for grazing wildlife.
10 singly used to index physiological stress in wildlife.
11  to assess the effects of water pollution in wildlife.
12 portant behavioral and ecological effects on wildlife.
13 xhibit greater diet-microbiome turnover than wildlife.
14 ity regarding the effects of dog presence on wildlife.
15 nvironment may pose risk to human health and wildlife.
16 BPE) flame retardant is generally unknown in wildlife.
17 everely compromising habitat suitability for wildlife.
18 of LCCPs surpass those of SCCPs and MCCPs in wildlife.
19 behavioral patterns and health in humans and wildlife.
20 ns of these management decisions for grazing wildlife.
21 te and chronic health problems in humans and wildlife.
22 ronment, possibly affecting human health and wildlife.
23 lt to establish, particularly in free-living wildlife.
24 dying the effects of contaminant exposure on wildlife.
25  as predators of and competitors with native wildlife.
26 h important implications for both humans and wildlife.
27 ng to different health outcomes in migratory wildlife.
28 ral challenges complicate its application to wildlife.
29 nts into valuable habitat for such important wildlife.
30 ers the perceptual world for both humans and wildlife.
31 ne habitat suitability and hence patterns of wildlife abundances over broad spatial scales is importa
32 liably estimating density of pumas and other wildlife across geographically expansive areas.
33 g disparate facets of disease systems at the wildlife-agriculture interface, it is essential that mul
34 stin resistance genes in animals, especially wildlife and aquaculture, and their possibility of trans
35 emic preparedness and should be monitored in wildlife and at the animal-human interface.
36 entally at the South Dakota State University Wildlife and Fisheries Captive Facility where adult whit
37 ion with consequences for climate feedbacks, wildlife and human communities.
38 those interested in simultaneously improving wildlife and human health.
39 d much concern because MeHg poses threats to wildlife and human health.
40 ng the role of climate and climate change on wildlife and human infectious disease dynamics over the
41 s in the world and is frequently detected in wildlife and humans, particularly children.
42 ate change will affect disease risk for both wildlife and humans.
43  has been associated with adverse effects on wildlife and humans.
44  health hazard to aquatic biota, piscivorous wildlife and humans.
45                             Restructuring of wildlife and livestock assemblages (both in terms of spe
46 tly control the disease, in particular where wildlife and livestock co-occur.
47 lection of biomarkers associated with human, wildlife and livestock diseases for development of diagn
48 on of pathogens across the interface between wildlife and livestock presents a challenge to the devel
49 t of human activities on the biodiversity of wildlife and livestock with which humans co-exist across
50 und impacts on the distributional ecology of wildlife and livestock, with implications for biodiversi
51  are an impractical, separated management of wildlife and outdated protected species lists.
52 isruption, leading to unexpected threats for wildlife and the environment.
53  as the scale of persistence and the role of wildlife and thus the opportunities and scale at which v
54 teria isolated from people, livestock, dogs, wildlife and water sources (n = 62,376 isolates).
55 tion at the appropriate scales might prevent wildlife and zoonotic diseases from increasing in preval
56 ps and suggest that vector-borne, generalist wildlife and zoonotic pathogens are the types of parasit
57 ervices to humans and preserving most forest wildlife, and can therefore guide forest preservation an
58 r potential negative impacts on the economy, wildlife, and human health provide strong incentives for
59 pecies, animal models, and the risk to pets, wildlife, and livestock.
60  of antimicrobial resistance between humans, wildlife, and livestock.
61 l for production, but highly significant for wildlife, and suggest that such tradeoffs may be further
62  framework across human and agricultural and wildlife animal health, focusing on the genetic and anti
63 l occurrence dataset of human, livestock and wildlife anthrax outbreaks.
64 dlife is consistent with the hypothesis that wildlife are a net sink rather than source of clinically
65  and the environment, to investigate whether wildlife are a net source for antimicrobial resistance i
66 orced regulations on recreational UAS use in wildlife areas are necessary to minimise disturbance to
67      Whether an infectious disease threat to wildlife arises from pathogen introduction or the increa
68 hat many of the globally observed impacts on wildlife attributed to anthropogenic activity may be exp
69 aily as part of the global > 30-billion USD, wildlife-based tourism industry.
70 t artificial lighting patterns may influence wildlife behavior at a broad scale throughout urban area
71  climates are altering wildlife habitats and wildlife behavior in complex ways.
72  many landscapes, and can dramatically alter wildlife behavior, physiology, and demography.
73 rse for not only the study of self-urbanized wildlife, but also for understanding life history and bo
74 tion on livestock farms that are managed for wildlife by the Royal Society for Protection of Birds (R
75 larly sensitive to dog bite rate, and during wildlife campaigns to animal consumption rate and human
76                         Food-provisioning of wildlife can facilitate reliable up-close encounters des
77              However, intentional feeding of wildlife can impact numerous aspects of an animals' beha
78                                              Wildlife carried a low prevalence of E coli isolates sus
79                                        Urban wildlife carry a high burden of clinically relevant anti
80                              Promoting human-wildlife coexistence is critical to the long-term conser
81 the diversity of anthropogenic influences on wildlife communities globally.
82 ve cascading, landscape-scale impacts across wildlife communities, which could result largely from th
83 dscape of fear with pervasive effects across wildlife communities.
84             While such subsidies can enhance wildlife condition, they can also result in unintended n
85 ement concern due their involvement in human-wildlife conflict, and their role as vectors of zoonotic
86         Accelerated habitat reduction, human-wildlife conflict, limited funding, and the complexity o
87 t prompt questions about how to reduce human-wildlife conflict.
88                                        Human-wildlife conflicts occur worldwide.
89 nvironments and contribute to mitigate human-wildlife conflicts.
90 ding primates, and frequently leads to human-wildlife conflicts.
91  sequencing technologies have revolutionized wildlife conservation genetics.
92  hazards to human health, food security, and wildlife conservation globally.
93                                      China's wildlife conservation has faced a series of challenges,
94 l wildlife species, so strengthening China's wildlife conservation is of great significance to global
95 sults clearly illustrate that management for wildlife conservation should be critically evaluated thr
96 ecosystem and identify potential threats for wildlife conservation, we analyzed, through real-time PC
97 significant units" should be integrated into wildlife conservation.
98 g industrial impacts for the human-dominated wildlife contact zone.
99                   Identifiable traits of the wildlife contribute to this exposure; however, compared
100 ion needed for brown bear conservation using wildlife corridor parameters.
101                      Identifying patterns of wildlife crime is a major conservation challenge.
102 es is key to disrupting trade and curtailing wildlife crime.
103 e pattern and severity of diseases affecting wildlife, crops and ourselves.
104  freshwater aquaculture in disease spread in wildlife, developing risk assessment modeling, and explo
105                                  We assessed wildlife diel activity responses to human presence and c
106 e and movement data collection to understand wildlife disease dynamics and plan their effective contr
107 in host home range movement and space use on wildlife disease dynamics are poorly understood, but cou
108                                 A key aim in wildlife disease ecology is to understand how host and p
109                                              Wildlife disease hosts vary in home range-associated for
110 case of chytridiomycosis, the most important wildlife disease of the past century.
111 m the mechanistic underpinnings of important wildlife disease processes, and this review represents a
112 ey conducted by the Southeastern Cooperative Wildlife Disease Study and from the United States Drough
113 s the spatial spread of directly transmitted wildlife disease through host-host contact structure.
114 n land use change, microbiome dysbiosis, and wildlife disease.
115 ing of the dynamics of HPAI infection in the wildlife-domestic poultry interface and may help to esta
116                                        Human-wildlife encounters are becoming increasingly frequent a
117 ttributed to serovars commonly isolated from wildlife/environment (e.g., Javiana).
118  suggest that the effects of urbanization on wildlife extend into the aerosphere and are complex, str
119 , an increasingly recognized cause of global wildlife extinctions worldwide, particularly in avian po
120  environment, such as habitat destruction or wildlife fatalities.
121                  Assessment of toxin risk to wildlife focuses mostly on offspring-related metrics, wh
122  spanning 40 years, which is rare for Arctic wildlife, for two species of seabird were assessed, and
123 ngths for environmental pollutants in Arctic wildlife, found correlations with precipitation for murr
124 s, which will ultimately allow the design of wildlife-friendly urban environments and contribute to m
125  agricultural matrix via the integration of "wildlife-friendly" habitat features (land sharing).
126        Furthermore, much of our knowledge of wildlife-GMB relationships is based on studies of coloni
127                         To better understand wildlife-GMB relationships, we engaged hunters as citize
128  particulate materials, SPMs) from Miankaleh Wildlife/Gorgan Bay, (Caspian Sea, Iran).
129 conservation priorities for several fish and wildlife groups - small-bodied vertebrates, large mammal
130  services such as flood control and fish and wildlife habitat, should be considered when creating pol
131 e 2008-16 and its impacts on crop yields and wildlife habitat.
132               Changing climates are altering wildlife habitats and wildlife behavior in complex ways.
133 ensifying anthropogenic pressures on aquatic wildlife habitats.
134 causing adverse health effects in humans and wildlife has led to the development of scientific and re
135                      Disease outbreaks among wildlife have surged in recent decades alongside climate
136  predicting the impacts of climate change on wildlife health requires a deeper understanding of seaso
137 bstantially impacted public, veterinary, and wildlife health.
138        Our results suggest that variation in wildlife home range movement behaviour increases the spa
139 aviruses (CoVs) have repeatedly emerged from wildlife hosts and infected humans and livestock animals
140 mate change models indicate that ectothermic wildlife hosts from temperate and tropical zones may exp
141                                        Known wildlife hosts of human-shared pathogens and parasites o
142    Unlike domestic pigs, warthogs, which are wildlife hosts of the virus, do not succumb to the letha
143 must co-occur with both humans and potential wildlife hosts, such as monkeys, in space and time.
144 read of infectious diseases within human and wildlife hosts.
145 reveal the hidden death toll of pathogens on wildlife hosts.
146 s in the context of evolutionary ecology and wildlife-human interactions.
147 istant phenotypes was compared between urban wildlife, humans, livestock, and the environment, to inv
148 crobial resistance overlap between sympatric wildlife, humans, livestock, and their shared environmen
149 vers and consequences of spatial patterns in wildlife immune defence.
150 habitat- and population-level differences in wildlife immune phenotypes.
151 ating the potential mercury risk to fish and wildlife in aquatic ecosystems and provides a framework
152 e trade in China has posed serious threat to wildlife in China and throughout the world, while leadin
153                         Notably, the role of wildlife in PPR epidemiology is still not clearly unders
154  use these data to examine the role of urban wildlife in the spread of clinically relevant antimicrob
155       Salmonella spp. are frequently shed by wildlife including turtles, but S. enterica subsp. enter
156 les on organochlorine accumulation in Arctic wildlife, including seabirds, and associated time scale
157                                  Close human-wildlife interactions are rapidly growing, particularly
158                 Although the nature of human-wildlife interactions has been well documented across a
159 ations, thus broadening our picture of human-wildlife interactions in urban environments.
160                                              Wildlife interactions with livestock, acquiring associat
161     Growing urbanization is increasing human-wildlife interactions, including attacks towards humans
162 ddress conservation issues relating to human-wildlife interactions.
163 nd NHPI and to inform management about human-wildlife interactions.
164  individual wild animals may influence human-wildlife interactions.
165         Despite increasing conflict at human-wildlife interfaces, there exists little research on how
166  edge degradation has effectively "squeezed" wildlife into the core protected area and has altered th
167 the environment, low phenotypic diversity in wildlife is consistent with the hypothesis that wildlife
168 owledge of the negative effects of debris on wildlife is largely based on consequences that are readi
169 multidrug-resistant E coli carriage in urban wildlife is linked to variation in ecological traits, su
170 ed concern for PFAS exposure of high trophic wildlife is still warranted, even in the northern enviro
171                        Hazing, i.e., scaring wildlife, is frequently promoted as an important non-let
172 ens, leaving our understanding of the GMB in wildlife limited.
173                   The structure of sympatric wildlife, livestock and human populations are characteri
174 diversity, density and species assemblage of wildlife, livestock and humans.
175 hat may expose nontarget organisms including wildlife, livestock, and humans to health risks.
176 c methods using field samples collected at a wildlife-livestock interface in Africa.
177 protection of habitats, and reduction of the wildlife-livestock-human interface.
178                                      Massive wildlife losses over the past 50 y have brought new urge
179              A critical element in effective wildlife management is monitoring the status of wildlife
180 ions for amendment of the laws and reform of wildlife management system.
181 st popular tools in fisheries, forestry, and wildlife management, and introgression of hatchery-reare
182 l health and encourage onward application to wildlife management.
183 e abundance in Russia well, which can inform wildlife managers on the long-term patterns of habitat u
184                              We advocate for wildlife managers to adopt a landscape-based approach an
185 logy and provides practical applications for wildlife medicine and management.
186  of photographic tourism's potential role in wildlife monitoring has been lacking, but is essential f
187 strate that tourist-contributed data can aid wildlife monitoring in protected areas by providing popu
188                          Although a range of wildlife monitoring methods exist, considerable focused
189  we conduct a natural field experiment using wildlife monitoring technology to test variation in the
190                   Approaches for quantifying wildlife mortality due to endemic infections have histor
191  limited by an inability to directly observe wildlife mortality in nature.
192 nmental citizen science projects, collecting wildlife observations, measures of water quality and muc
193  exceeded high or severe benchmarks of fish, wildlife, or human health risk.
194 with the emergence of infectious diseases of wildlife origins in human populations.
195           Roads and their traffic can affect wildlife over large areas and, in regions with dense roa
196           It is important to monitor PCBs in wildlife, particularly in highly exposed populations to
197                                              Wildlife, particularly those that use urban environments
198  could capitalize upon the immense number of wildlife photographs being taken daily as part of the gl
199  leading to inaccurate conclusions regarding wildlife physiological stress.
200 rime cases epitomize the serious threat that wildlife poisoning poses to biodiversity.
201 uch of the evidence on population effects of wildlife poisoning rests on assessments conducted at an
202 ion, and veterinary drugs have caused severe wildlife poisoning, pushing the populations of several a
203 portant implications for the conservation of wildlife population and confirm the validity of importan
204 atially explicit tracking and forecasting of wildlife population dynamics at scales that are relevant
205  density limits are needed to predict future wildlife population responses to anthropogenic threats.
206 t describing parasite prevalence across 7346 wildlife populations and 2021 host-parasite combinations
207  factors shaping the spatial organization of wildlife populations and assess the impact of epizootics
208 f effects that endemic parasites can have on wildlife populations and our theoretical framework for i
209 e populations; however, resources to monitor wildlife populations are typically limited.
210 ous diseases are responsible for declines in wildlife populations around the globe.
211 both positive and negative impacts on native wildlife populations at different scales of space and ti
212 graphic, and phylogenetic studies of dog and wildlife populations in the Russian Far East to show tha
213  microbial communities are structured across wildlife populations is poor.
214 ates has rarely been explored empirically in wildlife populations with long-term demographic data.
215  persistent are the post-war consequences on wildlife populations within and outside conflict zones?
216                                          For wildlife populations, disease-induced mortality is likel
217 anding the effects of infectious diseases on wildlife populations.
218  require vaccination of domestic dogs and/or wildlife populations.
219 trol infectious diseases within inaccessible wildlife populations.
220 rsity loss could negatively impact human and wildlife populations.
221 dlife management is monitoring the status of wildlife populations; however, resources to monitor wild
222            However, how do civil wars affect wildlife populations?
223  instead preyed on naturally occurring local wildlife prey in the CHs.
224            The insatiable human appetite for wildlife products drives species to extinction, spreads
225  that are common in the East African illegal wildlife products trade based on their unique high-resol
226 ical for the prosecution of illegally-traded wildlife products, conservation-based biodiversity resea
227                                 Although the Wildlife Protection Law of China was revised in 2016, th
228 strative resources, and serious obstacles to wildlife protection.
229                    Vaccination of endangered wildlife provides a valuable component of conservation s
230 nality among sites at the Sevilleta National Wildlife Refuge (NM, USA) that represent three dryland e
231           However, vaccination of endangered wildlife remains controversial, which has led to a focus
232 ve analysis to date of the gene responses in wildlife reproductive system to radiation.
233 ng used recreationally, commercially and for wildlife research, but very few studies have quantified
234        Human movement into insect vector and wildlife reservoir habitats determines zoonotic disease
235 upus) that prey on wild boar (Sus scrofa), a wildlife reservoir of tuberculosis, to examine how preda
236 atiotemporal patterns of NiV dynamics in its wildlife reservoir, Pteropus medius bats, in Bangladesh.
237 populations worldwide, often where potential wildlife reservoirs exist.
238 ow host life history traits can help predict wildlife reservoirs of zoonoses and the vulnerability of
239 ous interfaces between people, livestock and wildlife reservoirs of zoonotic disease.
240 quence human and animal pathogens persist in wildlife reservoirs.
241                                              Wildlife respond to human presence by adjusting their te
242  Evidence approach to demonstrate effects on wildlife resulting from its field exposure to ionizing r
243                                              Wildlife road mortality is well documented and extensive
244 iring associated AMR bacteria and genes, and wildlife's subsequent dispersal across the landscape are
245 48%) being overall better than their matched Wildlife Sanctuaries (WLSs; PAs with lower protection).
246 nd diversity of actinobacteria from Pobitora Wildlife Sanctuary and Kaziranga National Park of Assam,
247 y between individuals in the Cockscomb Basin Wildlife Sanctuary and the Maya Forest Corridor.
248  jaguar movement between the Cockscomb Basin Wildlife Sanctuary and the Maya Forest Corridor.
249 s forest fragments of the Lower Kinabatangan Wildlife Sanctuary, Sabah.
250 jaguar dispersal from and to Cockscomb Basin Wildlife Sanctuary.
251 acterize them, including in water, sediment, wildlife, seafood, and drinking water samples.
252 efore, because CDV circulates among multiple wildlife sources, dog vaccination alone would not be eff
253 m bovis infection has been described in many wildlife species across Africa.
254 e effects of current separated management of wildlife species and outdated protected species lists, a
255 he Russian Far East to show that a number of wildlife species are more important than dogs, both in m
256 of applying cutting edge methods to classify wildlife species from camera-trap data, we shed light on
257 ield assessments of other Chondrichthyes and wildlife species in the future.
258 n=2102) were collected from the faeces of 75 wildlife species inhabiting household compounds (ie, the
259 approach to differentiate 10 domestic and 24 wildlife species that are common in the East African ill
260 ommon practice, especially when dealing with wildlife species that are difficult to track or capture.
261 fire threatens the persistence of specialist wildlife species through direct loss of habitat and indi
262 ned in training a CNN to classify 20 African wildlife species with an overall accuracy of 87.5% from
263   Bushmeat, the meat and organs derived from wildlife species, is a common source of animal protein i
264                                Regardless of wildlife species, sample condition, season, or region, t
265     China has about 11% of the world's total wildlife species, so strengthening China's wildlife cons
266 he potential effects of changing climates on wildlife species.
267 n of MTBC in various sample types from other wildlife species.
268 ovis-infection, as shown in numerous African wildlife species.
269  and conservation in even the most iconic of wildlife species.
270 onmental pollution is a threat to humans and wildlife species.
271 ls and surface water in humans as well as in wildlife species.
272 a potential shortcoming inherent in previous wildlife studies that relied solely on a multi-tube appr
273 logistical constraints that are magnified in wildlife, such as poor control and substantial trait var
274                                              Wildlife surveys indicate, however, that bats may abando
275 ypical of many alternate flame retardants in wildlife, TBBPA-BDBPE levels in the gull samples were lo
276  to infect companion animals, livestock, and wildlife that could act as viral reservoirs.
277 d contaminant of concern for both people and wildlife that has been a focus of environmental remediat
278                                              Wildlife that interact closely with humans, livestock, a
279  future changes of disease risk in migratory wildlife that may arise from shifting migratory patterns
280 tock for sustenance, and the conservation of wildlife that often depend on livestock-dominated landsc
281        We detected parvovirus DNA in several wildlife tissues.
282                         Urbanisation exposes wildlife to new challenging conditions and environmental
283 ons are rapidly growing, particularly due to wildlife tourism popularity.
284                                              Wildlife tourists and guides are especially focussed on
285                                  The booming wildlife trade in China has posed serious threat to wild
286                                              Wildlife trade is a multibillion dollar industry that is
287 As a major transnational enterprise, illegal wildlife trade is valued between eight and 26.5 billion
288  of conserving habitat and regulating unsafe wildlife trade practices to reduce the risk of future pa
289 atural world, protect habitats, and regulate wildlife trade, including live animals and non-sustenanc
290 t establish effective legislation addressing wildlife trade, protection of habitats, and reduction of
291  disease 2019 (Covid-19) pandemic, linked to wildlife trade.
292 future in situ efforts to combat the illegal wildlife trade.
293 te and fair priority is critical scrutiny of wildlife trade.
294 od for manipulating CEC exposures in aquatic wildlife using two fat-based carriers (coconut oil and v
295 safety to address these concerns and bolster wildlife vaccination campaigns.
296                                              Wildlife vaccination is of urgent interest to reduce dis
297  restoration or conservation, based on their wildlife value, remains a significant challenge.
298 versity of antimicrobial-resistant E coli in wildlife was lower than in livestock, humans, and the en
299  rarely be answered for endemic pathogens of wildlife: what are the population- and landscape-level e
300                         Urbanization impacts wildlife, yet research has been limited to few taxa.

 
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