subject: Forestry and Natural Resources subject: Disease Ecology type: dataset
10.4231/R7MW2FBT
Brian James Tornabene , Jason T. Hoverman
03/08/2018
These data correspond to a paper entitled "The influence of landscape and environmental factors on ranavirus epidemiology in a California amphibian assemblage" by Tornabene et al. published in Freshwater Biology.
Amphibian Dilution Effect Disease Ecology Emerging Infectious Diseases Forestry and Natural Resources Iridovirus Multimodel Inference Ranavirus Reservoir Species
10.4231/BVZE-3057
Jason T. Hoverman , Samantha Gallagher
05/21/2019
These data correspond to a paper entitled "Healthy but smaller herds: Predators reduce pathogen transmission in an amphibian assemblage" by Gallagher et al. to be published in the Journal of Animal Ecology.
Amphibian Disease Ecology Food Web Forestry and Natural Resources Higher Order Interaction Natural Enemy Ecology Non-Consumptive Effect Parasite Pathogen Predator-Prey Interaction
10.4231/AY85-YD07
Jason T. Hoverman , Logan Scott Billet
01/15/2021
These data correspond to a paper entitled "Population-level variation in infection outcomes not influenced by pesticide exposure in larval wood frogs (Rana sylvatica)" by Billet et al. submitted to the journal Freshwater Biology in 2021.
Disease Ecology Echinostomatidae ecotoxicology Forestry and Natural Resources host-parasite interactions pesticides Ranavirus
10.4231/A4YZ-QP36
Jason T. Hoverman , Turner DeBlieux
02/15/2021
These data and code correspond to a paper entitled "Pathogens and predators: examining the separate and combined effects of natural enemies on community structure" by DeBlieux and Hoverman.
community composition community ecology Disease Ecology Forestry and Natural Resources healthy herds parasite-induced vulnerability predator ecology risk reduction
10.4231/Q5AE-XK39
Jason T. Hoverman , Sophia Brown , Wes Flynn
02/13/2020
These data correspond to a paper entitled "Perfluoroalkyl substances increase susceptibility of northern leopard frog tadpoles to trematode infection" by Brown et al. published in Environmental Toxicology & Chemistry.
Amphibian contaminants of emerging concern Disease Ecology Forestry and Natural Resources Parasite perfluoroalkyl substances wetlands
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