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1 January 1996 RABIES AND MORTALITY IN ETHIOPIAN WOLVES (CANIS SIMENSIS)
C. Sillero-Zubiri, A. A. King, D. W. Macdonald
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Abstract

Between October 1991 and February 1992, 41 of 53 known adult and subadult Ethiopian wolves (Canis simensis) in five adjacent packs in the Bale Mountains National Park, Ethiopia, died or disappeared. Brain smears from two carcasses were positive for rabies by the immunofluorescence test, and rabies virus was isolated from the brains by mouse inoculation. Based on monoclonal antibody tests on the mouse brains, we identified the virus as a minor variant of the serotype 1 rabies viruses found in domestic dogs and wild canids of Africa. Sera from two of 15 Ethiopian wolves had rabies virus neutralizing antibody.

Sillero-Zubiri, King, and Macdonald: RABIES AND MORTALITY IN ETHIOPIAN WOLVES (CANIS SIMENSIS)
C. Sillero-Zubiri, A. A. King, and D. W. Macdonald "RABIES AND MORTALITY IN ETHIOPIAN WOLVES (CANIS SIMENSIS)," Journal of Wildlife Diseases 32(1), 80-86, (1 January 1996). https://doi.org/10.7589/0090-3558-32.1.80
Received: 17 October 1994; Published: 1 January 1996
KEYWORDS
Canis simensis
case report
endangered species
Ethiopian wolf
rabies
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