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1 October 1975 EXPERIMENTAL INFECTION OF WHITE-TAILED DEER WITH RINDERPEST VIRUS
F. M. HAMDY, A. H. DARDIRI, D. H. FERRIS, S. S. BREESE
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Abstract

White-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) succumbed to experimental infection with virulent rinderpest (RP) virus that was also lethal to cattle and goats. The deer developed clinical signs typical of RP and died 5 and 6 days post-inoculation. Infection was confirmed by recovery of virus from blood before death, from lymph node tissue after necropsy, and demonstration of specific complement fixing antigen in those tissues. Electron micrographs of infected Vero cell cultures revealed extracellular virions and intracytoplasmic and intranuclear inclusions made of randomly distributed fibrillar strands.

HAMDY, DARDIRI, FERRIS, and BREESE: EXPERIMENTAL INFECTION OF WHITE-TAILED DEER WITH RINDERPEST VIRUS1
F. M. HAMDY, A. H. DARDIRI, D. H. FERRIS, and S. S. BREESE "EXPERIMENTAL INFECTION OF WHITE-TAILED DEER WITH RINDERPEST VIRUS," Journal of Wildlife Diseases 11(4), 508-515, (1 October 1975). https://doi.org/10.7589/0090-3558-11.4.508
Received: 17 March 1975; Published: 1 October 1975
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