Search Results - Kim M. Pepin

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  1. 1

    Cross–Species Transmission at the Wildlife–Livestock Interface: A Case Study of Epidemiological Inference From Mule Deer GPS Collar Data by Jennifer L. Malmberg, Jeremy Alder, Halcyon Killion, Danielle Buttke, Kim M. Pepin, George Wittemyer

    Published 2025-04-01

    ABSTRACT In the current era of global change, the emergence of infectious diseases at the wildlife–livestock interface poses risks to biodiversity, agricultural economies, and public health. Driven by anthropogenic influence, increased sharing of resources between wildlife and livestock can promote...

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  2. 2

    Community-Scale Surveillance of SARS-CoV-2 and Influenza A Viruses in Wild Mammals, United States, 2022–2023 by Grete Wilson-Henjum, J. Jeffrey Root, Alex Worgo, Jeffrey Chandler, Robin Dyer, Jeff Flores, Jesse Morris, Ian Plummer, John Paul Seman, Kyle Van Why, Caleb Wellman, H. Bryant White, John Wilt, Diego Diel, Jon Heale, David L. Bergman, Josh Hewitt, Derek Collins, Ryan S. Miller, Steven Rekant, Kim M. Pepin

    Published 2025-08-01

    Sampling of mammal communities across the United States during 2022–2023 detected evidence of SARS-CoV-2 antibodies in 3 new species and 2 previously described species and evidence of influenza A antibodies in 2 previously described species. Our analysis provides surveillance and sampling guidance...

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  3. 3

    Expanding National‐Scale Wildlife Disease Surveillance Systems With Research Networks by Kim M. Pepin, Matthew A. Combs, Guillaume Bastille‐Rousseau, Meggan E. Craft, Paul Cross, Maria A. Diuk‐Wasser, Roderick B. Gagne, Travis Gallo, Tyler Garwood, Jonathon D. Heale, Joshua Hewitt, Jennifer Høy‐Petersen, Jennifer Malmberg, Jennifer Mullinax, Laura Plimpton, Lauren Smith, Meredith C. VanAcker, Jeffrey C. Chandler, W. David Walter, Grete Wilson‐Henjum, George Wittemyer, Kezia Manlove

    Published 2025-06-01

    ABSTRACT Efficient learning about disease dynamics in free‐ranging wildlife systems can benefit from active surveillance that is standardized across different ecological contexts. For example, active surveillance that targets specific individuals and populations with standardized sampling across eco...

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