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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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Healing Rates of Wing Punch Wounds in Free-Ranging Little Brown Myotis (Myotis lucifugus)

TL;DR: Wound healing rates can be viewed as an indicator of both immune competence and of variations in energy allocation in this species and because the use of sterile biopsy punches to collect tissue for DNA analysis has become quite common, it is important to understand how quickly the resulting wounds heal.
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Antibodies to Pseudogymnoascus destructans are not sufficient for protection against white-nose syndrome.

TL;DR: Results show that antibody-mediated immunity cannot explain survival of European bats infected with Pd and that little brown myotis respond differently to Pd than species with higher WNS survival rates.
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Baseline and stress-induced glucocorticoids during reproduction in the variable flying fox, Pteropus hypomelanus (Chiroptera: Pteropodidae).

TL;DR: There was a continuum in the magnitude of the response to stress over time in females, with the greatest stress response in early pregnancy, a dampened response during late pregnancy, and no significant stress response during lactation, which suggests that being in a breeding group was chronically stressful for males.
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Nycteria parasites of Afrotropical insectivorous bats.

TL;DR: A survey of insectivorous bats from tropical Africa, including new isolates of species of the haemosporidian genus Nycteria, highlights that sequential population expansion in the liver and gametocyte formation is a successful alternative to intermediate erythrocytic replication cycles.
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Sex and hibernaculum temperature predict survivorship in white-nose syndrome affected little brown myotis (Myotis lucifugus).

TL;DR: The results demonstrate that WNS mortality varies among individuals, and that colder hibernacula are more favourable for survival, and suggest that female bats may be more negatively affected by WNS than male bats, which has important implications for the long-term survival of the little brown myotis in eastern North America.