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Animal mortality

About: Animal mortality is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 526 publications have been published within this topic receiving 14887 citations.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Investigating the need to distinguish humans from animals and testing the hypothesis derived from terror management theory that this need stems in part from existential mortality concerns found that reminders of death led to an increased emotional reaction of disgust to body products and animals.
Abstract: The present research investigated the need to distinguish humans from animals and tested the hypothesis derived from terror management theory that this need stems in part from existential mortality concerns. Specifically, the authors suggest that being an animal is threatening because it reminds people of their vulnerability to death; therefore, reminding people of their mortality was hypothesized to increase the need to distance from animals. In support, Study 1 revealed that reminders of death led to an increased emotional reaction of disgust to body products and animals. Study 2 showed that compared to a control condition, mortality salience led to greater preference for an essay describing people as distinct from animals; and within the mortality salient condition but not the control condition, the essay emphasizing differences from other animals was preferred to the essay emphasizing similarities. The implications of these results for understanding why humans are so invested in beautifying their bodies and denying creaturely aspects of themselves are discussed.

291 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: An animal mortality monitoring network in Gabon and the Republic of Congo has demonstrated potential to predict and possibly prevent human Ebola outbreaks.
Abstract: All human Ebola virus outbreaks during 2001–2003 in the forest zone between Gabon and Republic of Congo resulted from handling infected wild animal carcasses. After the first outbreak, we created an Animal Mortality Monitoring Network in collaboration with the Gabonese and Congolese Ministries of Forestry and Environment and wildlife organizations (Wildlife Conservation Society and Programme de Conservation et Utilisation Rationnelle des Ecosystemes Forestiers en Afrique Centrale) to predict and possibly prevent human Ebola outbreaks. Since August 2001, 98 wild animal carcasses have been recovered by the network, including 65 great apes. Analysis of 21 carcasses found that 10 gorillas, 3 chimpanzees, and 1 duiker tested positive for Ebola virus. Wild animal outbreaks began before each of the 5 human Ebola outbreaks. Twice we alerted the health authorities to an imminent risk for human outbreaks, weeks before they occurred.

275 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Jan 1988-Arctic
TL;DR: The George River caribou herd in northern Quebec/Labrador increased from about 5000 animals in 1954 to 472,200 animals prior to the 1984 calving season as mentioned in this paper.
Abstract: The George River caribou herd in northern Quebec/Labrador increased from about 5000 animals in 1954 to 472,200 (or 1.1 caribou/km) prior to the 1984 calving season. The range used by the herd expanded from 160,000 to 442,000 sq km for the period 1971-84. The exponential rate of increase (r) was estimated at 0.11 in the 1970s. Calf:female ratio in autumn was relatively constant (x=0.52) from 1973 to 1983, but decreased to about 0.39 in 1984-86. The harvest rate was relatively low in the 1970s (about 3%/y), but seemingly increased in the mid-1980s to 5-7% as a result of more liberal regulations and a greater impetus to exploit caribou for subsistence. The cumulative impact of lower calf recruitment and more intensive hunting may have appreciably depressed the growth rate of the herd in 1984-86. A greater year-round competition for food resources and a greater energy expenditure associated with range expansion are presented as probable regulatory factors for the George River herd. It is argued that the nature of caribou-habitat interactions in continental regions generate long-term fluctuations in caribou numbers if human exploitation remains low. At present, wolf predation does not appear to be an important mortality factor capable of regulating the George River herd. Key words: caribou, population regulation, food limitation, northem Quebec, Labrador, wolf predation

217 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The main objective of this study was to describe the incidence of mammary tumors and the survival after MTs, in female dogs between 3 and 10 years of age (insured for veterinary care and with life insurance in a Swedish animal-insurance company) from 1995 to 2002.

203 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Flow cytometric cell analysis, including S-phase rate and DNA ploidy, is of value in predicting the prognosis of canine mammary tumors and can be used as a new prognostic tool to improve the preoperative diagnostics of canine Mammary tumors.
Abstract: The prognostic variables of 223 consecutively sampled spontaneous mammary tumors from female dogs were studied. These variables included flow cytometric DNA analysis and cell proliferation measured as cells in S-phase rate evaluated from DNA histograms. The dogs were surgically treated, in most cases with unilateral mastectomy (all mammary glands), and 202 of the 223 dogs were studied temporally following surgery. Univariate analysis with correction for age indicated that the variables of lymph node metastasis, elevated S-phase rate, presence of a sarcoma, DNA aneuploidy, and ulceration and infiltrative growth into underlying tissue had a statistically significant negative influence on the survival rates of dogs with a diagnosed malignant tumor. Similar results were obtained from tests on all dogs, but tumor size and its relative hazard increased with increasing size of the tumors, regardless of whether total or disease-specific mortality was considered. Using multivariate-analysis conducted Cox's proportional hazards model, elevated S-phase rate, increased age, and presence of a sarcoma remained statistically significant risk factors. The prognostic value of DNA ploidy and lymph node status varied depending on choice of end point. The study of tumor growth pattern and tumor size provided no prognostic information in the multivariate analysis. Flow cytometric cell analysis, including S-phase rate and DNA ploidy, is of value in predicting the prognosis of canine mammary tumors and can be used as a new prognostic tool to improve the preoperative diagnostics of canine mammary tumors.

193 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
202129
202025
201924
201822
201724
201620