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1 January 1992 THE RED-TAILED HAWK, BUTEO JAMAICENSIS, A NATIVE DEFINITIVE HOST OF FRENKELIA MICROTI (APICOMPLEXA) IN NORTH AMERICA
Steve J. Upton, Richard D. McKown
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Abstract

Oral inoculation of prairie voles, Microtus ochrogaster, with coccidian sporocysts isolated from the feces of a red-tailed hawk, Buteo jamaicensis, in Kansas, USA, resulted in formation of Frenkelia microti (Apicomplexa: Sarcocystidae) tissue cysts in the brains of the voles. Five additional isolates of morphologically similar sporocysts collected from red-tailed hawks or other Buteo spp. in Kansas failed to result in detectable infections in rodents. These results are the first to verify that red-tailed hawks are natural definitive hosts in North America for F. microti.

Upton and McKown: THE RED-TAILED HAWK, BUTEO JAMAICENSIS, A NATIVE DEFINITIVE HOST OF FRENKELIA MICROTI (APICOMPLEXA) IN NORTH AMERICA
Steve J. Upton and Richard D. McKown "THE RED-TAILED HAWK, BUTEO JAMAICENSIS, A NATIVE DEFINITIVE HOST OF FRENKELIA MICROTI (APICOMPLEXA) IN NORTH AMERICA," Journal of Wildlife Diseases 28(1), 85-90, (1 January 1992). https://doi.org/10.7589/0090-3558-28.1.85
Received: 24 June 1991; Published: 1 January 1992
KEYWORDS
Buteo jamaicensis
Coccidia
Frenkelia microti
Microtus ochrogaster
red-tailed hawk
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