Recent studies of woodland caribou (Rangifer tarandus caribou) in northern Quebec and central Labrador have demonstrated similar patterns of seasonal movements and distribution among four herds. Aerial surveys and radio-telemetry indicated that animals occupied forest-wetland habitat at densities of 0.03 caribou km2, or lower, for most of the year. Although females were widely dispersed at calving individuals demonstrated fidelity toward specific calving locations, in successive years. Caribou did not form large post-calving aggregations. Movement was greatest in the spring, prior to calving, and in the fall, during or immediately after rutting. Caribou were generally sedentary during summer and winter, although some moved relatively long distances to late-winter range. Although the herds occupy continuous range across Quebec and Labrador, our data indicate that the herds are largely discreete and should be managed individually.
This document establishes safety guidelines for physicians, nurses, and allied health care and facility staff who may be exposed to patients infected with severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) in a health care facility. SARS-CoV-2 infection is highly contagious and places health care workers at risk for infection resulting in coronavirus disease (COVID-19). Physicians, nurses, and allied health care and facility staff in all frontline environments must be provided and utilize necessary personal protective equipment (PPE). It is important that health care staff adopt a universal set of guidelines in which to conduct themselves in order to minimize infection with the SARS-CoV-2 contagion. The establishment of these guidelines is necessary in this viral pandemic since such directives can create a standard of safety that is universally accepted. These guidelines establish a framework to provide consistency among health care facilities and staff from the time the staff member arrives at the health care facility until they return home. These guidelines provide a practical description of the minimum necessary protection for physicians, nurses, and allied health care and facility staff against SARS-CoV-2 infection.
Embryo transfer into seronegative recipients, using the procedure proposed by IETS, is an effective way to prevent vertical transmission of N caninum. Results provide support for pretransfer testing of all embryo transfer recipients.
During May 1996 and April 1997, eight harlequin duck males were captured and fitted with satellite transmitters while migrating along the shores of Forillon National Park, Québec, Canada. Another 17 males were equipped with satellite transmitters in river systems of eastern Hudson Bay, Ungava Bay and northern Labrador in June 1997 and 1998. Our objectives were to determine relationships between breeding, moulting and wintering areas, and to determine whether distinct population segments existed among harlequin ducks in eastern North America. All birds tracked from Forillon migrated to Labrador. Moulting areas were identified for six birds. Forillon males were followed to the eastern North American major wintering site in Maine. Males captured in northern Québec and Labrador migrated to moult and winter in south‐western Greenland. Our data suggest the presence of two demographically distinct population segments in eastern North America, perhaps originating from the Pleistocene glacial refuge in western Greenland and south of the Laurentide ice sheet in eastern Canada or United States.
The influence of electric transmission rights-of-way on the activity of moose (Alces alces) was determined by aerial surveys during winter and inventories of browsed plant species the following summer. Moose make significant less use of the rights-of-way than the adjacent forest, but the edge zone is frequented more. Winter grounds are also found significantly less frequently in these transmission corridors. The difference in use between the two habitats is even more pronounced when the rights-of-way have been treated with a phytocide. The quantity of browse in untreated rights-of-way does not differ significantly from that found in the adjacent forest, but in treated corridors, it is three times lower. Rights-of-way that are 90 m wide are more frequently crossed in winter than those that are 140 m wide. Wild red cherry (Prunus pensylvanica) is the most browsed species in southern parts of the corridors, whereas white birch (Betula papyrifera) is the preferred plant of moose in northern areas. There is no difference between the types of forest stands in adjacent forest stations that are used by moose and those that are not. The influence of the electric transmission rights-of-way is considered weak because the natural density of the moose population is low.[Journal translation]
A monoclonal immunoglobulin G1 (IgG1) antisalbutamol, which exhibits a 75% cross-reactivity with clenbuterol, has been used in the setup of an immunoaffinity chromatography method and a chemiluminescence enzyme immunoassay for the extraction and the quantification of salbutamol and clenbuterol in tissue samples. After analytical validation, the proposed methodology was applied to liver, kidney and muscle samples obtained from calves and pigs treated with these beta 2-agonists (100 micrograms per kg of body weight) for 10 d. This methodology allowed the quantification of both drugs until 6 d after the final dose. At this time, however, salbutamol and clenbuterol were concentrated in the liver. Our results indicate that the liver is the preferred tissue to sample for the detection of illegal use of beta 2-agonists as growth promoters, in the absence of urine samples.
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