47 results on '"Vanderwolf, Karen"'
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2. Psychrotolerant Microfungi Associated with Deer Mice (Peromyscus maniculatus) in a White-nose Syndrome Positive Bat Hibernaculum in Eastern Canada
3. Echoes through time: amazing inferences from a fossil bat
4. Skin fungal assemblages of bats vary based on susceptibility to white-nose syndrome
5. A review of sebum in mammals in relation to skin diseases, skin function, and the skin microbiome
6. Bat Populations and Cave Microclimate Prior to and at the Outbreak of White-Nose Syndrome in New Brunswick
7. Same data, different analysts: variation in effect sizes due to analytical decisions in ecology and evolutionary biology
8. Growth medium and incubation temperature alter the Pseudogymnoascus destructans transcriptome : implications in identifying virulence factors
9. Consumption of Bats (Myotis spp.) by Raccoons (Procyon lotor) During an Outbreak of White-Nose Syndrome in New Brunswick, Canada: Implications for Estimates of Bat Mortality
10. Hibernacula water chemistry and implications for hibernating bats
11. Fungi associated with hibernating bats in New Brunswick caves: the genus Leuconeurospora
12. Ectomycota Associated with Hibernating Bats in Eastern Canadian Caves prior to the Emergence of White-nose Syndrome
13. A world review of fungi, yeasts, and slime molds in caves
14. Biogeographic and Conservation Significance of the Occurrence of the Canadian Endemic Sorex maritimensis (Maritime Shrew) in Northern New Brunswick
15. Erratum to: Skin pH varies among bat species seasons and between wild and captive bats
16. Mycobiome Traits Associated with Disease Tolerance Predict Many Western North American Bat Species Will Be Susceptible to White-Nose Syndrome
17. Fungi associated with aeroponic roots in caves and mines of New Brunswick
18. Landscape Genetic Connectivity and Evidence for Recombination in the North American Population of the White-Nose Syndrome Pathogen, Pseudogymnoascus destructans
19. Hibernacula microclimate and declines in overwintering bats during an outbreak of white‐nose syndrome near the northern range limit of infection in North America
20. Skin pH varies among bat species and seasons and between wild and captive bats
21. Skin fungal assemblages of bats vary based on susceptibility to white-nose syndrome
22. No Change Detected in Culturable Fungal Assemblages on Cave Walls in Eastern Canada with the Introduction of Pseudogymnoascus destructans
23. Spatial variation of mercury bioaccumulation in bats of Canada linked to atmospheric mercury deposition
24. Psychrotolerant Microfungi Associated with Deer Mice (Peromyscus maniculatus) in a White-nose Syndrome Positive Bat Hibernaculum in Eastern Canada
25. Correction: Prelude to a panzootic: Gene flow and immunogenetic variation in northern little brown myotis vulnerable to bat white-nose syndrome
26. Prelude to a panzootic: Gene flow and immunogenetic variation in northern little brown myotis vulnerable to bat white-nose syndrome
27. Fungus Causing White-Nose Syndrome in Bats Accumulates Genetic Variability in North America with No Sign of Recombination
28. Fungus causing White-Nose Syndrome in bats accumulates genetic variability in North America and shows no sign of recombination
29. Using a Novel Partitivirus in Pseudogymnoascus destructans to Understand the Epidemiology of White-Nose Syndrome
30. Molecular Detection ofPseudogymnoascus destructans(Ascomycota: Pseudeurotiaceae) and Unidentified Fungal Dermatitides on Big Brown Bats (Eptesicus fuscus) Overwintering inside Buildings in Canada
31. Ectomycota Associated with Arthropods from Bat Hibernacula in Eastern Canada, with Particular Reference to Pseudogymnoascus destructans
32. Detecting viable Pseudogymnoascus destructans (Ascomycota: Pseudeurotiaceae) from walls
33. Lack of cave-associated mammals influences the fungal assemblages of insular solution caves in eastern Canada
34. From your backyard: an ingenious way to discourage seed- and suet-stealing squirrels (and at least one hungry raccoon), a feeder flap between a collared-dove and a Red-bellied Woodpecker, and a new-to-our backyards raptor
35. Psychrotolerant Microfungi Associated with Deer Mice (Peromyscus maniculatus) in a White-nose Syndrome Positive Bat Hibemaculum in Eastern Canada.
36. Clonal Expansion of the Pseudogymnoascus destructans Genotype in North America Is Accompanied by Significant Variation in Phenotypic Expression
37. Growth medium and incubation temperature alter the Pseudogymnoascus destructanstranscriptome: implications in identifying virulence factors
38. A world review of fungi, yeasts, and slime molds in caves
39. Molecular Detection of Pseudogymnoascus destructans (Ascomycota: Pseudeurotiaceae) and Unidentified Fungal Dermatitides on Big Brown Bats ( Eptesicus fuscus) Overwintering inside Buildings in Canada.
40. Fungi on white-nose infected bats (Myotis spp.) in Eastern Canada show no decline in diversity associated with Pseudogymnoascus destructans (Ascomycota: Pseudeurotiaceae).
41. FUNGI ASSOCIATED WITH OVER-WINTERING TRICOLORED BATS, PERIMYOTIS SUBFLAVUS, IN A WHITE-NOSE SYNDROME REGION OF EASTERN CANADA.
42. Bat Populations and Cave Microclimate Prior to and at the Outbreak of White-Nose Syndrome in New Brunswick
43. Biogeographic and Conservation Significance of the Occurrence of the Canadian EndemicSorex maritimensis(Maritime Shrew) in Northern New Brunswick
44. Consumption of Bats (Myotis spp.) by Raccoons (Procyon lotor) During an Outbreak of White-Nose Syndrome in New Brunswick, Canada: Implications for Estimates of Bat Mortality
45. Clonal Expansion of the Pseudogymnoascus destructans Genotype in North America Is Accompanied by Significant Variation in Phenotypic Expression.
46. Canadian Bat.
47. From Your Backyard.
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