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Anthropogenic landscape alteration promotes higher disease risk in wild New Zealand avian communities
by
Filion, Antoine
in
Avian malaria
/ Birds
/ Effect of habitat modification on
/ Environmentally induced diseases
/ Epidemiology
/ Turdus
2022
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Anthropogenic landscape alteration promotes higher disease risk in wild New Zealand avian communities
by
Filion, Antoine
in
Avian malaria
/ Birds
/ Effect of habitat modification on
/ Environmentally induced diseases
/ Epidemiology
/ Turdus
2022
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Anthropogenic landscape alteration promotes higher disease risk in wild New Zealand avian communities
Journal Article
Anthropogenic landscape alteration promotes higher disease risk in wild New Zealand avian communities
2022
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Overview
Tests how long-lasting human modification to regional environmental filters can subsequently alter local biotic filters, in turn promoting the emergence of avian malaria in New Zealand avian communities. Unravels the drivers of disease emergence within the complex interplay between landscape and local species pools. Investigates whether altered landscape leads to more infections in Turdus spp. and modification in avian community composition, potentially raising the probability of infection for other species in the community. Looks at the role played by climatic variables associated with the presence of vectors in shaping the regional pattern of avian malaria occurrence. Source: National Library of New Zealand Te Puna Matauranga o Aotearoa, licensed by the Department of Internal Affairs for re-use under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 New Zealand Licence.
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