Pages that link to "Item:Q47632"
From geokb
The following pages link to Jeffrey M Lorch (Q47632):
Displayed 35 items.
- Mycobiome traits associated with disease tolerance predict many western North American bat species will be susceptible to white-nose syndrome (Q268571) (← links)
- Comparative genomics analyses support the reclassification of Bisgaard taxon 40 as Mergibacter gen. nov., with Mergibacter septicus sp. nov. as type species: Novel insights into the phylogeny and virulence factors of a Pasteurellaceae family member a (Q274237) (← links)
- Seasonal sex steroids indicate reproductive costs associated with snake fungal disease (Q275256) (← links)
- The population genetics of the causative agent of snake fungal disease indicate recent introductions to the USA (Q280408) (← links)
- Development and application of a qPCR-based genotyping assay for Ophidiomyces ophidiicola to investigate the epidemiology of ophidiomycosis (Q280976) (← links)
- Frequent transitions in mating-type locus chromosomal organization in Malassezia and early steps in sexual reproduction (Q281980) (← links)
- Snake fungal disease: An emerging threat to wild snakes (Q283495) (← links)
- Soil reservoir dynamics of ophidiomyces ophidiicola, the causative agent of snake fungal disease (Q283811) (← links)
- Evidence of vertical transmission of the snake fungal pathogen Ophidiomyces ophiodiicola (Q284091) (← links)
- Quarterly wildlife mortality report October 2020 (Q284692) (← links)
- Mortality of little brown bats (Myotis lucifugus carissima) naturally exposed to microcystin-LR (Q287102) (← links)
- A cross inoculation experiment reveals Ophidiomyces ophiodiicola and Nannizziopsis guarroi can each infect both snakes and lizards (Q287914) (← links)
- Detection of Bisgaard taxon 40 in Rhinoceros Auklets (Cerorhinca monocerata) with pneumonia and septicemia from a mortality event in Washington, USA (Q288891) (← links)
- Wild rodents harbor high diversity of Arthroderma (Q289732) (← links)
- Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium from wild birds in the United States represent distinct lineages defined by bird type (Q290265) (← links)
- Prevalence of Ophidiomyces ophidiicola and epizootiology of snake fungal disease in free-ranging Northern Pine Snakes (Pituophis melanoleucus melanoleucus) in New Jersey (Q290365) (← links)
- Mortality due to Tyzzer's disease of muskrats in northern Ohio, USA (Q292062) (← links)
- Phylogenetics of a fungal invasion: Origins and widespread dispersal of white-nose syndrome (Q293256) (← links)
- Skin fungal assemblages of bats vary based on susceptibility to white-nose syndrome (Q300480) (← links)
- Low occurrence of multi-antimicrobial and heavy metal resistance in Salmonella enterica from wild birds in the United States (Q301184) (← links)
- Low-level detection of SFD-causing Ophidiomyces on Burmese Pythons in southwest Florida, with confirmation of the pathogen on co-occurring native snakes (Q302817) (← links)
- Field diagnostics and seasonality of Ophidiomyces ophiodiicola in wild snake populations (Q308902) (← links)
- Analysis of mitochondrial DNA sequence data demonstrates that monophyly of myotis occultus is complicated by greater sampling of myotis lucifugus (Q308999) (← links)
- Code for: Small enzootic survival costs mask the potential for long-term population size suppression (Q318485) (← links)
- Analysis of mitochondrial DNA sequence data from Myotis lucifugus and Myotis occultus (Q322465) (← links)
- Pd qPCR Interlaboratory Testing Results (Q323464) (← links)
- Paranannizziopsis spp. associated with skin lesions in wild snakes in North America and development of a real-time PCR assay for rapid detection of the fungus in clinical samples (Q323488) (← links)
- Pseudogymnoascus destructans survival at elevated temperatures - Artificial media count data (Q323547) (← links)
- Skin mycobiomes of eastern North American bats (Q325489) (← links)
- Population genetic analysis of the snake-infecting fungus, Ophidiomyces ophidiicola, in the eastern United States (Q326565) (← links)
- Data from Burmese Pythons swabbed for the presence of SFD-causing Ophidiomyces in southwest Florida (Q328282) (← links)
- Confirmed cases of snake fungal disease in historical museum specimens (Q329238) (← links)
- Tracking the growth of Ophidiomyces ophidiicola over time in natural and sterile soils using quantitative PCR (Q330085) (← links)
- Skin mycobiomes of western North American bats (Q331090) (← links)
- Emerging fungal pathogen Ophidiomyces ophiodiicola in wild European snakes (Q336154) (← links)