Works (3)

Updated: July 5th, 2023 15:46

2013 journal article

Assessing rabies knowledge and perceptions among ethnic minorities in Greensboro, North Carolina

The Journal of Wildlife Management, 77(7), 1321–1326.

By: M. Palamar n, M. Peterson n, C. Deperno n & M. Correa n

author keywords: African American; bilingual; education; gender; Hispanics; Latino; public health; rabies; urban; zoonotic disease
TL;DR: Evaluated knowledge of rabies, transmission routes, vector species, and response to rabies exposure with a bilingual in-person survey in Greensboro, North Carolina found Latinos and African Americans had less rabies knowledge than non-Latino Whites and men had less knowledge than women. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
Sources: Web Of Science, Crossref, NC State University Libraries
Added: August 6, 2018

2012 journal article

Baylisascaris procyonis in raccoons (Procyon lotor) from North Carolina and current status of the parasite in the USA

Parasitology Research, 112(2), 693–698.

By: S. Hernandez*, B. Galbreath*, D. Riddle*, A. Moore*, M. Palamar n, M. Levy n, C. DePerno n, M. Correa n, M. Yabsley*

MeSH headings : Animals; Ascaridida Infections / epidemiology; Ascaridida Infections / parasitology; Ascaridida Infections / veterinary; Ascaridoidea / isolation & purification; DNA, Helminth / chemistry; DNA, Helminth / genetics; DNA, Intergenic / chemistry; DNA, Intergenic / genetics; Parasite Load; Prevalence; Raccoons / parasitology; Sequence Analysis, DNA; United States / epidemiology
TL;DR: Results indicate that B. procyonis is established in North Carolina and given the zoonotic and wildlife health implications of this parasite, additional surveillance in North Korea and other southeastern states is warranted. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
Sources: Web Of Science, Crossref, NC State University Libraries
Added: August 6, 2018

2011 journal article

Climate Change and Species Range Dynamics in Protected Areas

BIOSCIENCE, 61(10), 752–761.

By: J. Monzon, L. Moyer-Horner & M. Palamar*

author keywords: climate change; protected areas; range shifts; species distributions; mitigation
TL;DR: Climate change presents an immense challenge to protected areas but also an unparalleled opportunity to shift from managing for static, historical community composition toward managing for dynamic, novel assemblages, thus complementing the traditional individual-species approach with an ecosystem-services approach. (via Semantic Scholar)
Source: Web Of Science
Added: August 6, 2018

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