<div><p>Background</p><p>Prevention and control of wildlife disease invasions relies on the ability to predict spatio-temporal dynamics and understand the role of factors driving spread rates, such as seasonality and transmission distance. Passive disease surveillance (i.e., case reports by public) is a common method of monitoring emergence of wildlife diseases, but can be challenging to interpret due to spatial biases and limitations in data quantity and quality.</p><p>Methodology/Principal findings</p><p>We obtained passive rabies surveillance data from dead striped skunks (<i>Mephitis mephitis</i>) in an epizootic in northern Colorado, USA. We developed a dynamic patch-occupancy model which predicts spatio-temporal spreading while accoun...
1. Animal movement influences the spatial spread of directly-transmitted wildlife disease through ho...
The quantitative analysis of pathogen transmission within its specific spatial context should improv...
Rabies is an important zoonotic disease distributed worldwide. A key question in rabies epidemiology...
Background - Prevention and control of wildlife disease invasions relies on the ability to predict s...
Since 1981, an epizootic of raccoon rabies has spread throughout the eastern United States. A concom...
The south-central skunk rabies virus (SCSK) is the most broadly distributed terrestrial viral lineag...
Since 1981, an epizootic of raccoon rabies has spread throughout the eastern United States. A concom...
Often as an epidemic spreads, the leading front is irregular, reflecting spatial variation in local ...
The south-central skunk rabies virus (SCSK) is the most broadly distributed terrestrial viral lineag...
The south-central skunk rabies virus (SCSK) is the most broadly distributed terrestrial viral lineag...
A striped skunk (Mephitis mephitis) rabies epizootic in northwestern Wyoming was studied from the In...
The south-central skunk rabies virus (SCSK) is the most broadly distributed terrestrial viral lineag...
Predicting the geographic spread of wildlife epidemics requires knowledge about the movement pattern...
Rabies is an epizootic disease, infecting many species of mammals and resulting in almost certain de...
Citation: Raghavan, R. K., Hanlon, C. A., Goodin, D. G., Davis, R., Moore, M., Moore, S., & Anderson...
1. Animal movement influences the spatial spread of directly-transmitted wildlife disease through ho...
The quantitative analysis of pathogen transmission within its specific spatial context should improv...
Rabies is an important zoonotic disease distributed worldwide. A key question in rabies epidemiology...
Background - Prevention and control of wildlife disease invasions relies on the ability to predict s...
Since 1981, an epizootic of raccoon rabies has spread throughout the eastern United States. A concom...
The south-central skunk rabies virus (SCSK) is the most broadly distributed terrestrial viral lineag...
Since 1981, an epizootic of raccoon rabies has spread throughout the eastern United States. A concom...
Often as an epidemic spreads, the leading front is irregular, reflecting spatial variation in local ...
The south-central skunk rabies virus (SCSK) is the most broadly distributed terrestrial viral lineag...
The south-central skunk rabies virus (SCSK) is the most broadly distributed terrestrial viral lineag...
A striped skunk (Mephitis mephitis) rabies epizootic in northwestern Wyoming was studied from the In...
The south-central skunk rabies virus (SCSK) is the most broadly distributed terrestrial viral lineag...
Predicting the geographic spread of wildlife epidemics requires knowledge about the movement pattern...
Rabies is an epizootic disease, infecting many species of mammals and resulting in almost certain de...
Citation: Raghavan, R. K., Hanlon, C. A., Goodin, D. G., Davis, R., Moore, M., Moore, S., & Anderson...
1. Animal movement influences the spatial spread of directly-transmitted wildlife disease through ho...
The quantitative analysis of pathogen transmission within its specific spatial context should improv...
Rabies is an important zoonotic disease distributed worldwide. A key question in rabies epidemiology...