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Cited by 7 publications
(11 citation statements)
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“…() found variation in bacteria‐killing ability against E. coli between American robins, house sparrows, and gray catbirds ( Dumetella carolinensis ), suggesting that species could vary in susceptibility to infection due to innate differences in ability to defend against infection, leading to differences in risk of causing enteric pathogen outbreaks. Further, physiological differences among species such as full versus rudimentary caeca may affect susceptibility to pathogen colonization (Albuquerque et al ., ). The ecoimmunological ‘pace of life’ hypothesis predicts that bird species with early maturity, rapid breeding, short longevity, etc., face a trade‐off between resources devoted to these life‐history characteristics and those allotted to anti‐pathogen defences (Ostfeld et al ., ).…”
Section: Conceptual Framework For Understanding Spillover Of Enteric mentioning
confidence: 97%
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“…() found variation in bacteria‐killing ability against E. coli between American robins, house sparrows, and gray catbirds ( Dumetella carolinensis ), suggesting that species could vary in susceptibility to infection due to innate differences in ability to defend against infection, leading to differences in risk of causing enteric pathogen outbreaks. Further, physiological differences among species such as full versus rudimentary caeca may affect susceptibility to pathogen colonization (Albuquerque et al ., ). The ecoimmunological ‘pace of life’ hypothesis predicts that bird species with early maturity, rapid breeding, short longevity, etc., face a trade‐off between resources devoted to these life‐history characteristics and those allotted to anti‐pathogen defences (Ostfeld et al ., ).…”
Section: Conceptual Framework For Understanding Spillover Of Enteric mentioning
confidence: 97%
“…3 days post inoculation, but lower doses were not tested, leaving uncertainty around the infectious dose. Rock pigeons shed between 1.5 × 10 4 and 2 × 10 9 CFU/ml up to 14 days post inoculation during a 35‐day trial (Albuquerque et al ., ). In a 10‐day trial, house sparrows orally inoculated with 10 2 CFU of a songbird outbreak strain of Salmonella Typhimurium shed on days 1 and 5, birds given 10 3 CFU shed on days 1–2 and 6–10, birds given 10 5 CFU shed most days (2/6 died on days 8 and 10), and birds given 10 8 CFU shed every day until their death (6/6 birds died on days 3–8) (Connolly et al ., ).…”
Section: Conceptual Framework For Understanding Spillover Of Enteric mentioning
confidence: 97%
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“…Among more than 2,500 Salmonella serotypes described, the Typhimurium serotype has been associated with cases of human gastroenteritis in many countries, including Brazil GHILARDI et al, 2006). (SOUSA et al, 2010;ALBUQUERQUE et al, 2013). In these birds, the Typhimurium serotype persists chronically inside macrophages, resulting in the long-term infection of the flock (PASMARS et al, 2008).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%