化学固定对美洲狮运动的影响。

IF 1.1 4区 农林科学 Q3 VETERINARY SCIENCES Journal of Wildlife Diseases Pub Date : 2024-10-01 DOI:10.7589/JWD-D-23-00191
Carter J Littlefair, Andrew E Derocher, Paul F Frame, Mark A Edwards, Delaney D Frame, Owen M Slater, Corey A Smereka
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引用次数: 0

摘要

捕捉和处理野生动物是管理和研究的常见做法。随着遥测技术的普遍使用,捕捉和化学固定野生动物的需求也在增加。人们往往对释放动物后固定剂的效果会持续多久知之甚少,但为了确保分析使用的数据能够反映自然行为,我们需要了解这些效果。2016 年至 2021 年期间,在加拿大艾伯塔省中西部,87 头美洲狮(美洲狮)被使用美托咪定、唑拉西泮和瓦塔明(MZT)进行了化学固定,并被套上了项圈,其中 27 头美洲狮被重新套上了项圈。我们检查了个体每天的移动距离,并比较了重新系领前后的相等时间段,以确定捕获后的移动率与捕获前的移动率是否有显著差异。在重新系领后的1天内,每天的移动速度恢复到了捕获前的速度(t20=2.09,P=0.18)。我们的研究结果提供了美洲狮使用 MZT 如何影响捕获后移动的深入见解,因此可能有助于解释释放后的移动数据。
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Chemical Immobilization Effects on Cougar (Felis concolor) Movement.

Capturing and handling wildlife is a common practice for both management and research. As telemetry use has become common, the need to capture and chemically immobilize wildlife has increased. Understanding how long the effects of immobilizing agents last after releasing the animal is often poorly understood but needed to ensure that analyses use data that reflect natural behavior. Between 2016 and 2021, 60 cougars (Puma concolor) were chemically immobilized with medetomidine, zolazepam, and tiletamine (MZT) and collared across west-central Alberta, Canada, 27 of which were individuals being recollared. We examined the distance an individual traveled per day and compared equivalent periods before and after the recollaring event to determine whether postcapture movement rates were significantly different from precapture rates. Within 1 d of the recollaring, daily movement rates had returned to precapture rates (t20=2.09, P=0.18). Our results provide insight on how MZT used in cougars affects their postcapture movement and thus may be helpful in interpreting movement data after release.

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来源期刊
Journal of Wildlife Diseases
Journal of Wildlife Diseases 农林科学-兽医学
CiteScore
2.70
自引率
0.00%
发文量
213
审稿时长
6-16 weeks
期刊介绍: The JWD publishes reports of wildlife disease investigations, research papers, brief research notes, case and epizootic reports, review articles, and book reviews. The JWD publishes the results of original research and observations dealing with all aspects of infectious, parasitic, toxic, nutritional, physiologic, developmental and neoplastic diseases, environmental contamination, and other factors impinging on the health and survival of free-living or occasionally captive populations of wild animals, including fish, amphibians, reptiles, birds, and mammals. Papers on zoonoses involving wildlife and on chemical immobilization of wild animals are also published. Manuscripts dealing with surveys and case reports may be published in the Journal provided that they contain significant new information or have significance for better understanding health and disease in wild populations. Authors are encouraged to address the wildlife management implications of their studies, where appropriate.
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