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1 July 1976 EPIZOOTIOLOGY OF AN OUTBREAK OF CEREBROSPINAL NEMATODIASIS IN COTTONTAIL RABBITS AND WOODCHUCKS
H. A. JACOBSON, P. F. SCANLON, V. F. NETTLES, W. R. DAVIDSON
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Abstract

An epizootic of cerebrospinal nematodiasis in cottontail rabbits (Sylvilagus floridanus) and woodchucks (Marmota monax) caused by Baylisascaris procyonis larvae followed the establishment of an ascarid-infected raccoon (Procyon lotor) population in a woodlot. Five of seven raccoons examined from the woodlot harbored ascarids, with one heavily infected animal shedding approximately 27,500 eggs per gram of feces. A laboratory-reared cottontail rabbit developed neurologic disease due to larval migration 80 days after infection with B. procyonis eggs from the raccoons.

JACOBSON, SCANLON, NETTLES, and DAVIDSON: EPIZOOTIOLOGY OF AN OUTBREAK OF CEREBROSPINAL NEMATODIASIS IN COTTONTAIL RABBITS AND WOODCHUCKS
H. A. JACOBSON, P. F. SCANLON, V. F. NETTLES, and W. R. DAVIDSON "EPIZOOTIOLOGY OF AN OUTBREAK OF CEREBROSPINAL NEMATODIASIS IN COTTONTAIL RABBITS AND WOODCHUCKS," Journal of Wildlife Diseases 12(3), 357-360, (1 July 1976). https://doi.org/10.7589/0090-3558-12.3.357
Received: 19 January 1976; Published: 1 July 1976
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