Yellow fever strikes monkey populations in South America
A group of Argentine scientists, including health experts from the Wildlife Conservation Society, have announced that yellow fever is the culprit in a 2007-2008 die-off of howler monkeys in northeastern Argentina, a finding that underscores the importance of paying attention to the health of wildlife and how the health of people and wild nature are so closely linked. Source: Wildlife Conservation Society - Discipline: Epidemiology
Yellow fever strikes monkey populations in South America
A group of Argentine scientists, including health experts from the Wildlife Conservation Society, have announced that yellow fever is the culprit in a 2007-2008 die-off of howler monkeys in ...
Thu 11 Mar 10 from PhysOrg
Featured - Yellow fever strikes monkey populations in South America, Fri 12 Mar 10 from Labspaces.net
Yellow fever strikes monkey populations in South America, Mon 15 Mar 10 from ScienceDaily
Yellow fever strikes monkey populations in South America, Fri 12 Mar 10 from e! Science News
Yellow fever strikes monkey populations in South America, Thu 11 Mar 10 from Science Blog
Yellow fever killed rare monkeys
POSADAS, Argentina, March 12 (UPI) -- A yellow fever outbreak killed 59 rare howler monkeys in northeastern Argentina, said scientists investigating the 2007-08 die-off.
Fri 12 Mar 10 from UPI
- Pages: 1