Domestic dogs can affect human health through bites and pathogen transmission, particularly in resource-poor countries where dogs, including owned ones, predominantly roam freely. Habitat and resource selection analysis methods are commonplace in wildlife studies but have not been used to investigate the environmental resource use of free-roaming domestic dogs (FRDD). The present study implements GPS devices to investigate habitat selection by FRDD from an urban site and a rural site in Indonesia, and one urban and two rural sites in Guatemala (N = 321 dogs). Spatial mixed effects logistic regression models, accounting for heterogeneous distribution of the resources, showed that patterns of habitat selection by FRDD were similar across stud...
In human-populated landscapes, dogs (Canis familiaris) are often the most abundant terrestrial carni...
Gathering information on how invasive species utilize the habitat is important, in order to better a...
In many regions of the world domestic dogs are free roaming and live in close relationship with huma...
Domestic dogs can affect human health through bites and pathogen transmission, particularly in resou...
Abstract Domestic dogs can affect human health through bites and pathogen transmission, particularly...
Free roaming domestic dogs (FRDD) are the main vectors for rabies transmission to humans worldwide. ...
Dogs (Canis familiaris) are among the earliest domesticated animals and one of the most ubiquitous d...
Controlling and preventing outbreaks of infectious diseases in human and non-human animals is a prio...
Variation in the spatial ecology of animals influences the transmission of infections and so underst...
Dog populations, like other populations, depend on the availability of resources (food, water, and s...
The spatial ecology of free‐roaming dogs determines their role in the transmission of zoonoses. This...
Free-roaming dogs (Canis lupus familiaris) are of public health and conservation concern because of ...
An understanding of the core demographic characteristics of the sub-populations of FRD is essential ...
Dogs play a major role in public health because of potential transmission of zoonotic diseases, such...
Abstract The small Indian mongoose (Urva auropunctata) is the primary terrestrial wildlife rabies re...
In human-populated landscapes, dogs (Canis familiaris) are often the most abundant terrestrial carni...
Gathering information on how invasive species utilize the habitat is important, in order to better a...
In many regions of the world domestic dogs are free roaming and live in close relationship with huma...
Domestic dogs can affect human health through bites and pathogen transmission, particularly in resou...
Abstract Domestic dogs can affect human health through bites and pathogen transmission, particularly...
Free roaming domestic dogs (FRDD) are the main vectors for rabies transmission to humans worldwide. ...
Dogs (Canis familiaris) are among the earliest domesticated animals and one of the most ubiquitous d...
Controlling and preventing outbreaks of infectious diseases in human and non-human animals is a prio...
Variation in the spatial ecology of animals influences the transmission of infections and so underst...
Dog populations, like other populations, depend on the availability of resources (food, water, and s...
The spatial ecology of free‐roaming dogs determines their role in the transmission of zoonoses. This...
Free-roaming dogs (Canis lupus familiaris) are of public health and conservation concern because of ...
An understanding of the core demographic characteristics of the sub-populations of FRD is essential ...
Dogs play a major role in public health because of potential transmission of zoonotic diseases, such...
Abstract The small Indian mongoose (Urva auropunctata) is the primary terrestrial wildlife rabies re...
In human-populated landscapes, dogs (Canis familiaris) are often the most abundant terrestrial carni...
Gathering information on how invasive species utilize the habitat is important, in order to better a...
In many regions of the world domestic dogs are free roaming and live in close relationship with huma...