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1 July 2009 CANINE DISTEMPER VIRUS–ASSOCIATED ENCEPHALITIS IN FREE-LIVING LYNX (LYNX CANADENSIS) AND BOBCATS (LYNX RUFUS) OF EASTERN CANADA
Pierre-Yves Daoust, Scott R. McBurney, Dale L. Godson, Marco W. G. van de Bildt, Albert D. M. E. Osterhaus
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Abstract

Between 1993 and 1999, encephalitis caused by morbillivirus was diagnosed by immunohistochemistry and histology in six lynx (Lynx canadensis) and one bobcat (Lynx rufus) in the eastern Canadian provinces of New Brunswick and Nova Scotia. Five of the six cases in lynx occurred within an 11-mo period in 1996–97. A second bobcat with encephalitis caused by unidentified protozoa and a nematode larva also had immunohistochemical evidence of neurologic infection by morbillivirus. The virus was identified as canine distemper virus (CDV) by reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction and nucleotide sequencing in four of five animals from which frozen tissue samples were available, and it was isolated in cell culture from one of them. To our knowledge, this is the first report of disease caused by CDV in free-living felids in North America.

Daoust, McBurney, Godson, van de Bildt, and Osterhaus: CANINE DISTEMPER VIRUS–ASSOCIATED ENCEPHALITIS IN FREE-LIVING LYNX (LYNX CANADENSIS) AND BOBCATS (LYNX RUFUS) OF EASTERN CANADA
Pierre-Yves Daoust, Scott R. McBurney, Dale L. Godson, Marco W. G. van de Bildt, and Albert D. M. E. Osterhaus "CANINE DISTEMPER VIRUS–ASSOCIATED ENCEPHALITIS IN FREE-LIVING LYNX (LYNX CANADENSIS) AND BOBCATS (LYNX RUFUS) OF EASTERN CANADA," Journal of Wildlife Diseases 45(3), 611-624, (1 July 2009). https://doi.org/10.7589/0090-3558-45.3.611
Received: 14 September 2007; Published: 1 July 2009
KEYWORDS
bobcat
Canada
distemper
lynx
Lynx canadensis
Lynx rufus
morbillivirus
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