The conventional objective of vaccination programmes is to eliminate infection by reducing the reproduction number of an infectious agent to less than one, which generally requires vaccination of the majority of individuals. In populations of endangered wildlife, the intervention required to deliver such coverage can be undesirable and impractical; however, endangered populations are increasingly threatened by outbreaks of infectious disease for which effective vaccines exist. As an alternative, wildlife epidemiologists could adopt a vaccination strategy that protects a population from the consequences of only the largest outbreaks of disease. Here we provide a successful example of this strategy in the Ethiopian wolf, the world's rarest ca...
Rabies has been eliminated from domestic dog populations in Western Europe and North America, but co...
Infectious disease is an emerging threat that conservationists are ill-equipped to manage. The threa...
Canine vaccination has been successful in controlling rabies in diverse settings worldwide. However,...
Disease often plays a large role in the population dynamics of wild canids, and is the most immediat...
Pathogens such as rabies virus and canine distemper virus present a significant risk to the long-ter...
Diseases are a major cause of population declines in endangered populations of several canid species...
Infectious diseases pose an important extinction risk for a number of endangered carnivore populatio...
Infectious disease constitutes a substantial threat to the viability of endangered species. Populati...
With rabies emerging as a particular threat to wild canids, we report on a rabies outbreak in a subp...
Infectious disease can pose a substantial threat to wildlife populations. While pathogens are genera...
Canine rabies can be effectively controlled by vaccination with readily available, high-quality vacc...
Domestic animals are one of the primary global sources of disease due to their position at the inter...
100 per cent preventable B. Abela-Ridder Rabies is 100 per cent preventable by vaccination in animal...
<div><p>Canine rabies can be effectively controlled by vaccination with readily available, high-qual...
The Ethiopian wolf (Canis simensis) is the world’s rarest canid; ≈500 wolves remain. The largest pop...
Rabies has been eliminated from domestic dog populations in Western Europe and North America, but co...
Infectious disease is an emerging threat that conservationists are ill-equipped to manage. The threa...
Canine vaccination has been successful in controlling rabies in diverse settings worldwide. However,...
Disease often plays a large role in the population dynamics of wild canids, and is the most immediat...
Pathogens such as rabies virus and canine distemper virus present a significant risk to the long-ter...
Diseases are a major cause of population declines in endangered populations of several canid species...
Infectious diseases pose an important extinction risk for a number of endangered carnivore populatio...
Infectious disease constitutes a substantial threat to the viability of endangered species. Populati...
With rabies emerging as a particular threat to wild canids, we report on a rabies outbreak in a subp...
Infectious disease can pose a substantial threat to wildlife populations. While pathogens are genera...
Canine rabies can be effectively controlled by vaccination with readily available, high-quality vacc...
Domestic animals are one of the primary global sources of disease due to their position at the inter...
100 per cent preventable B. Abela-Ridder Rabies is 100 per cent preventable by vaccination in animal...
<div><p>Canine rabies can be effectively controlled by vaccination with readily available, high-qual...
The Ethiopian wolf (Canis simensis) is the world’s rarest canid; ≈500 wolves remain. The largest pop...
Rabies has been eliminated from domestic dog populations in Western Europe and North America, but co...
Infectious disease is an emerging threat that conservationists are ill-equipped to manage. The threa...
Canine vaccination has been successful in controlling rabies in diverse settings worldwide. However,...