D
DeeAnn M. Reeder
Researcher at Bucknell University
Publications - 71
Citations - 9648
DeeAnn M. Reeder is an academic researcher from Bucknell University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Myotis lucifugus & Pseudogymnoascus destructans. The author has an hindex of 28, co-authored 66 publications receiving 9048 citations. Previous affiliations of DeeAnn M. Reeder include National Museum of Natural History & Boston University.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Mammal Species of the World: A Taxonomic and Geographic Reference
TL;DR: Wilson and Reeder's Mammal Species of the World as discussed by the authors is the classic reference book on the taxonomic classification and distribution of more than 5400 species of mammals that exist today.
Journal Article
Animal biodiversity: An outline of higher-level classification and survey of taxonomic richness
Zhi-Qiang Zhang,John Na Hooper,Rob W. M. Van Soest,Andrzej Pisera,Andrea L. Crowther,Seth Tyler,Stephen Schilling,William N. Eschmeyer,Jon D. Fong,David C. Blackburn,David B. Wake,Don E. Wilson,DeeAnn M. Reeder,Uwe Fritz,Mike Hodda,Roberto Guidetti,Roberto Bertolani,Georg Mayer,Ivo de Sena Oliveira,Jonathan M. Adrain,Roger N. Bamber,Adriano B. Kury,Lorenzo Prendini,Mark S. Harvey,Frédéric Beaulieu,Ashley P. G. Dowling,Hans Klompen,Gilberto J. de Moraes,David Evans Walter,Qing-Hai Fan,Vladimir Pešić,Harry Smit,Andre V. Bochkov,AA Khaustov,Anne S. Baker,Andreas Wohltmann,Tinghuan Wen,James W. Amrine,P Beron,Jianzhen Lin,Grzegorz Gabrys,Robert W. Husband,Samuel J. Bolton,M Uusitalo,Heinrich Schatz,Valerie M. Behan-Pelletier,Barry M. OConnor,Roy A. Norton,Jason A. Dunlop,David Penney,Alessandro Minelli,William A. Shear,Shane T. Ahyong,James K. Lowry,Miguel Alonso,Geoffrey A. Boxshall,Peter Castro,Sarah Gerken,Gordan S. Karaman,Joseph W. Goy,Diana S. Jones,Kenneth Meland,D. Christopher Rogers,Jrundur Svavarsson,Frans Janssens,Kenneth Christiansen,Sigfrid Ingrisch,Paul D. Brock,Judith Marshall,George W. Beccaloni,Paul Eggleton,Laurence A. Mound,S. A. Slipinski,Rab Leschen,John F. Lawrence,Ralph W. Holzenthal,John C. Morse,Karl M. Kjer,Erik J. van Nieukerken,Lauri Kaila,Ian J. Kitching,Niels P. Kristensen,David C. Lees,Joël Minet,Charles Mitter,Marko Mutanen,Jerome C. Regier,Thomas J. Simonsen,Niklas Wahlberg,Shen-Horn Yen,Reza Zahiri,David Adamski,Joaquin Baixeras,Daniel Bartsch,Bengt Å. Bengtsson,John W. Brown,Sibyl R. Bucheli,Donald R. Davis,Jurate De Prins,Willy De Prins,Marc E. Epstein,Patricia Gentili-Poole,Cees Gielis,Peter Haettenschwiler,Axel Hausmann,Jeremy D. Holloway,Axel Kallies,Ole Karsholt,Akito Y. Kawahara,Sjaak J C Koster,Mikhail V. Kozlov,J. Donald Lafontaine,Gerardo Lamas,Jean-François Landry,Sangmi Lee,Matthias Nuss,Kyu-Tek Park,Carla M. Penz,Jadranka Rota,Alexander Schintlmeister,B. Christian Schmidt,Jae-Cheon Sohn,M. Alma Solis,Gerhard M. Tarmann,Andrew D. Warren,Susan J. Weller,Roman V. Yakovlev,Vadim V. Zolotuhin,Andreas Zwick,Thomas Pape,Vladimir Blagoderov,Mikhail B. Mostovski,Christian C. Emig,Hendrik Segers,Scott Monks,Dennis J. Richardson +135 more
Journal ArticleDOI
Experimental infection of bats with Geomyces destructans causes white-nose syndrome
Jeffrey M. Lorch,Carol U. Meteyer,Melissa Behr,Justin G. Boyles,Paul M. Cryan,Alan C. Hicks,Anne Ballmann,Jeremy T. H. Coleman,David N. Redell,DeeAnn M. Reeder,David S. Blehert +10 more
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that exposure of healthy little brown bats to pure cultures of G. destructans causes white-nose syndrome and that the recent emergence of WNS in North America may represent translocation of the fungus to a region with a naive population of animals.
Journal ArticleDOI
Stress in free-ranging mammals: integrating physiology, ecology, and natural history
TL;DR: How the activity of the HPA axis at baseline levels follows circadian and circannual rhythms in ways that allow animals to respond to predictable environmental changes is described, focusing largely on the endpoint of this axis, the glucocorticoid hormones cortisol and corticosterone.
Journal ArticleDOI
Frequent arousal from hibernation linked to severity of infection and mortality in bats with white-nose syndrome
DeeAnn M. Reeder,Craig L. Frank,Gregory G. Turner,Carol U. Meteyer,Allen Kurta,Eric R. Britzke,Megan E. Vodzak,Scott R. Darling,Craig W. Stihler,Alan C. Hicks,Roymon Jacob,Laura E. Grieneisen,Sarah A. Brownlee,Laura K. Muller,David S. Blehert +14 more
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that WNS-affected bats aroused to euthermic body temperatures more frequently than unaffected bats, likely contributing to subsequent mortality, and the number of arousal bouts since datalogger attachment significantly predicted date of death.