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Epizootic

Index Epizootic

In epizoology, an epizootic (from Greek: epi- upon + zoon animal) is a disease event in a nonhuman animal population, analogous to an epidemic in humans. [1]

118 relations: Aeromonas caviae, Albino gaur, Animal Research Institute Buildings, Anton Bacalbașa, Argulus foliaceus, Aspergillus sydowii, Aurantimonas coralicida, Baiji, Betpak-Dala, Blain (animal disease), Bovine spongiform encephalopathy, Campeonato Argentino Abierto de Polo, Cetacean morbillivirus, Chinese giant salamander, Chlamydia psittaci, Chytridiomycosis, Dichocoenia stokesi, Dolphin, Elimia virginica, Elizabethkingia miricola, Entomophaga grylli, Entomophthora muscae, Enzootic, Epizootiology, European hare, Falcon adenovirus A, Florida Reef, Foot-and-mouth disease, Forced Labour Convention, General Motors streetcar conspiracy, Goose Guandong virus, Gorgonia ventalina, Grass goby, Grasshopper, Group B streptococcal infection, Gypsy moths in the United States, H5N1 genetic structure, H5N1 vaccine, Health in Nepal, History of veterinary medicine in the Philippines, Influenza, Influenza A virus, Influenza A virus subtype H5N1, Jean Macnamara, Kan'ei Great Famine, Kim Rak-hui, Kyasanur Forest disease, Kyōhō famine, La Palmyre Zoo, Lemur, ..., List of wolf attacks in North America, Louis Pasteur, Megalocytivirus, Melahat Okuyan, Meoma ventricosa, Monkey goby, Monogenea, Mycobacterium shottsii, Necrotising hepatopancreatitis, New River (Mexico–United States), Newcastle disease, Nudaurelia cytherea, October 1959, Panzootic, Perkinsus marinus, Peruvian horse sickness virus, Petrus Johann du Toit, Philibert Chabert, Photobacterium, Piscirickettsia salmonis, Plagues of Egypt, Public health genomics, Rabies, Raccoon, Raccoon dog, Ranavirus, Red fox, Research Centre for Emerging and Reemerging Infectious Diseases, Rift Valley fever, Rinderpest, Rocio viral encephalitis, Round goby, Saiga antelope, Salmon louse, Second plague pandemic, Sendai virus, Siege of Perekop (1736), Slaughterhouse, Social Immunity, South Korea foot-and-mouth outbreak, Southern bluefin tuna, Streptococcus agalactiae, Striped skunk, Sylvatic plague, Taï Forest virus, Tarbagan marmot, Theories of the Black Death, Timeline of Japanese history, Toque macaque, TRACES, Turtle leech, Tyzzer's disease, Unfree labour, Urban plague, Utrecht sodomy trials, Vaalharts Valley, Venezuelan equine encephalitis virus, West Nile fever, White plague (coral disease), Wild boar, World Organisation for Animal Health, World Veterinary Association, Yellow fever, Zambezi, 1890s African rinderpest epizootic, 2000s (decade), 2001 United Kingdom foot-and-mouth outbreak, 2007 United Kingdom foot-and-mouth outbreak. Expand index (68 more) »

Aeromonas caviae

Aeromonas caviae is a Gram-negative bacterium of the genus Aeromonas isolated from epizootic guinea pigs.

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Albino gaur

Albino gaur or white bison are a type of gaur, occasionally seen in the Manjampatti Valley, a protected area at the eastern end of Indira Gandhi Wildlife Sanctuary and National Park in Coimbatore District, Tamil Nadu, South India.

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Animal Research Institute Buildings

Animal Research Institute Buildings is a heritage-listed set of research station buildings at 681 Fairfield Road, Yeerongpilly, City of Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.

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Anton Bacalbașa

Anton Costache Bacalbașa (commonly known as Toni or Tony Bacalbașa, pen names Rigolo, Wunderkind,, Paul D. Popescu,, in Ziarul Prahova, February 11, 2012 Jus., Wus., Zig. etc.; Victor Durnea,, in Cultura, Nr. 312, February 2011 February 21, 1865 – October 1, 1899) was a Romanian political journalist, humorist and politician, chiefly remembered for his antimilitaristic series Moș Teacă.

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Argulus foliaceus

Argulus foliaceus is a species of crustaceans in the family Argulidae, the fish lice.

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Aspergillus sydowii

Aspergillus sydowii is a pathogenic fungus that causes several diseases in humans.

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Aurantimonas coralicida

Aurantimonas coralicida is a gram-negative bacterium, and a causative agent of white plague in Caribbean corals.

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Baiji

The baiji (Lipotes vexillifer, Lipotes meaning "left behind", vexillifer "flag bearer") is a functionally extinct species of freshwater dolphin formerly found only in the Yangtze River in China.

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Betpak-Dala

Betpak-Dala or Betpaqdala (Kazakh: Бетпақдала, from Turkic batpak, “swampy,” or Persian bedbaht, “unlucky” and Turkic dala, “plain”; Russian: Сeверная Голодная степь, lit. Hungry Steppe) is a desert region in Kazakhstan.

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Blain (animal disease)

Blain was an animal disease of unknown etiology that was well known in the eighteenth- and nineteenth centuries.

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Bovine spongiform encephalopathy

Bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE), commonly known as mad cow disease, is a transmissible spongiform encephalopathy and fatal neurodegenerative disease in cattle that may be passed to humans who have eaten infected flesh.

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Campeonato Argentino Abierto de Polo

The Campeonato Argentino Abierto de Polo (Spanish for Argentine Polo Open Championship) is the most important international polo championship at club level, that has taken place every year since 1893 at the Campo Argentino de Polo of Palermo, Buenos Aires.

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Cetacean morbillivirus

Cetacean morbillivirus (CeMV) is a virus that infects marine mammals in the order Cetacea, which includes dolphins, porpoises and whales.

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Chinese giant salamander

The Chinese giant salamander (Andrias davidianus) is the largest salamander and largest amphibian in the world, reaching a length of, although it rarely reaches that size today.

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Chlamydia psittaci

Chlamydia psittaci is a lethal intracellular bacterial species that may cause endemic avian chlamydiosis, epizootic outbreaks in mammals, and respiratory psittacosis in humans.

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Chytridiomycosis

Chytridiomycosis is an infectious disease in amphibians, caused by the chytrid fungi Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis and Batrachochytrium salamandrivorans, a nonhyphal zoosporic fungus.

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Dichocoenia stokesi

Dichocoenia stokesi, commonly known as pineapple coral or elliptical star coral, is a species of stony coral in the family Meandrinidae.

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Dolphin

Dolphins are a widely distributed and diverse group of aquatic mammals.

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Elimia virginica

Elimia virginica, common names the Piedmont elimia or Virginia river snail, is a species of freshwater snail with an operculum, an aquatic gastropod mollusk in the family Pleuroceridae.

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Elizabethkingia miricola

Elizabethkingia miricola is a species of bacterium isolated from condensation water in Space Station Mir,Ying Li, Yoshiaki Kawamura, Nagatoshi Fujiwara, Takashi Naka, Hongsheng Liu, Xinxiang Huang, Kazuo Kobayashi & Takayuki Ezaki.

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Entomophaga grylli

Entomophaga grylli is a fungal pathogen which infects and kills grasshoppers.

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Entomophthora muscae

Entomophthora muscae is a species of pathogenic fungus in the order Entomophthorales which causes a fatal disease in flies.

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Enzootic

Enzootic is the non-human equivalent of endemic and means, in a broad sense, "belonging to" or "native to", "characteristic of", or "prevalent in" a particular geography, race, field, area, or environment; native to an area or scope.

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Epizootiology

Epizootiology, epizoology, or veterinary epidemiology is the study of disease patterns within animal populations.

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European hare

The European hare (Lepus europaeus), also known as the brown hare, is a species of hare native to Europe and parts of Asia.

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Falcon adenovirus A

Falcon adenovirus A is an avian adenovirus capable of infecting birds of the genus Falco, commonly called falcons.

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Florida Reef

The Florida Reef (also known as the Great Florida Reef, Florida reefs, Florida Reef Tract and Florida Keys Reef Tract) is the only living coral barrier reef in the continental United States.

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Foot-and-mouth disease

Foot-and-mouth disease or hoof-and-mouth disease (Aphthae epizooticae) is an infectious and sometimes fatal viral disease that affects cloven-hoofed animals, including domestic and wild bovids.

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Forced Labour Convention

The Forced Labour Convention, the full title of which is the Convention Concerning Forced or Compulsory Labour, 1930 (No.29), is one of eight ILO fundamental conventions of the International Labour Organization.

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General Motors streetcar conspiracy

The General Motors streetcar conspiracy refers to convictions of General Motors (GM) and other companies for monopolizing the sale of buses and supplies to National City Lines (NCL) and its subsidiaries, and to allegations that this was part of a deliberate plot to purchase and dismantle streetcar systems in many cities in the United States as an attempt to monopolize surface transportation.

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Goose Guandong virus

The Goose Guandong virus refers to the strain A/Goose/Guangdong/1/96 (Gs/Gd)-like H5N1 HPAI viruses.

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Gorgonia ventalina

Gorgonia ventalina, the purple sea fan, is a species of sea fan, an octocoral in the family Gorgoniidae.

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Grass goby

The grass goby (Zosterisessor ophiocephalus) is a species of goby native to the Mediterranean Sea, the Sea of Azov and the Black Sea.

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Grasshopper

Grasshoppers are insects of the suborder Caelifera within the order Orthoptera, which includes crickets and their allies in the other suborder Ensifera.

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Group B streptococcal infection

Group B streptococcus infection, also known as Group B streptococcal disease, is the infection caused by the bacterium Streptococcus agalactiae (S. agalactiae) (also known as group B streptococcus or GBS).

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Gypsy moths in the United States

The gypsy moth (Lymantria dispar) was introduced in 1868 into the United States by Étienne Léopold Trouvelot, a French scientist living in Medford, Massachusetts.

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H5N1 genetic structure

H5N1 genetic structure is the molecular structure of the H5N1 virus's RNA.

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H5N1 vaccine

A H5N1 vaccine is an influenza vaccine intended to provide immunization to influenza A virus subtype H5N1.

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Health in Nepal

Health care services in Nepal are provided by the public and private sector and generally do not reach the benchmark of international standards.

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History of veterinary medicine in the Philippines

The history of veterinary medicine in the Philippines discusses the history of veterinary medicine as a profession in the Philippines.

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Influenza

Influenza, commonly known as "the flu", is an infectious disease caused by an influenza virus.

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Influenza A virus

Influenza A virus causes influenza in birds and some mammals, and is the only species of influenza virus A genus of the Orthomyxoviridae family of viruses.

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Influenza A virus subtype H5N1

Influenza A virus subtype H5N1, also known as A(H5N1) or simply H5N1, is a subtype of the influenza A virus which can cause illness in humans and many other animal species.

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Jean Macnamara

Dame Annie Jean Macnamara, DBE (1 April 1899 – 13 October 1968) was an Australian medical doctor and scientist, best known for her contributions to children's health and welfare.

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Kan'ei Great Famine

The Kan'ei Great Famine (寛永の大飢饉), was a famine which affected Japan during the reign of Empress Meishō in Edo period.

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Kim Rak-hui

Kim Rak-hui (11 November 1933 – February 2013) was a North Korean politician.

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Kyasanur Forest disease

Kyasanur Forest disease (KFD) is a tick-borne viral hemorrhagic fever endemic to South Asia.

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Kyōhō famine

The Kyōhō famine (享保の大飢饉, Kyōhō no daikikin), was a famine which affected Japanese Kyushu island during the reign of Emperor Nakamikado in Edo period.

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La Palmyre Zoo

La Palmyre Zoo (French: Zoo de La Palmyre) is a zoo in Les Mathes, Charente-Maritime, near Royan, in southwestern France.

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Lemur

Lemurs are a clade of strepsirrhine primates endemic to the island of Madagascar.

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List of wolf attacks in North America

There are few documented wolf attacks on humans in North America in comparison to Eurasia and other larger carnivores.

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Louis Pasteur

Louis Pasteur (December 27, 1822 – September 28, 1895) was a French biologist, microbiologist and chemist renowned for his discoveries of the principles of vaccination, microbial fermentation and pasteurization.

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Megalocytivirus

Megalocytivirus is one of five genera of viruses within the family Iridoviridae and one of three genera within this family which infect teleost fishes, along with Lymphocystivirus and ''Ranasvirus''.

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Melahat Okuyan

Melahat Okuyan (born 1926) is a Turkish female veterinary physician, academic and scientist in microbiology.

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Meoma ventricosa

Meoma ventricosa, known by the common names cake urchin and red heart urchin, is a large species of sea urchin which lives in shallow waters in the Caribbean.

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Monkey goby

The monkey goby (Neogobius fluviatilis) is a species of goby native to the basins of the Black Sea and the Sea of Azov.

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Monogenea

Monogeneans are a group of ectoparasites commonly found on the skin, gills, or fins of fish.

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Mycobacterium shottsii

Mycobacterium shottsii is a slowly growing, non-pigmented mycobacteria isolated from striped bass (Morone saxatilis) during an epizootic of mycobacteriosis in the Chesapeake Bay.

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Necrotising hepatopancreatitis

Necrotising hepatopancreatitis (NHP), is also known as Texas necrotizing hepatopancreatitis (TNHP), Texas Pond Mortality Syndrome (TPMS) and Peru necrotizing hepatopancreatitis (PNHP), is a lethal epizootic disease of farmed shrimp.

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New River (Mexico–United States)

The New River (Río Nuevo) flows north from near Cerro Prieto, through the city of Mexicali, Baja California, Mexico, into the United States through the city of Calexico, California, towards the Salton Sea.

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Newcastle disease

Newcastle disease is a contagious viral bird disease affecting many domestic and wild avian species; it is transmissible to humans.

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Nudaurelia cytherea

Nudaurelia cytherea (Fabr., 1775), commonly known as the pine tree emperor moth, or christmas caterpillar due to its festive colouration, is a southern African member of the Saturniidae family.

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October 1959

The following events occurred in October 1959.

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Panzootic

A panzootic (from Greek παν pan all + ζόιον zoion animal) is an epizootic (an outbreak of an infectious disease of animals) that spreads across a large region (for example a continent), or even worldwide.

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Perkinsus marinus

Perkinsus marinus is a species of alveolates belonging to the phylum Perkinsozoa.

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Peruvian horse sickness virus

The Peruvian horse sickness virus (PHSV) is a cause of the neurological disorder Peruvian horse sickness resulting in encephalitis in horses and other livestock.

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Petrus Johann du Toit

Petrus Johann du Toit (16 March 1888 – 13 November 1967) was a noted South African veterinary scientist and the successor of Arnold Theiler as Director of Veterinary Services at Onderstepoort between 1927 and 1948.

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Philibert Chabert

Philibert Chabert (6 January 1737 – 8 September 1814) was a French agronomist and veterinarian.

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Photobacterium

Photobacterium is a genus of gram-negative bacteria in the family Vibrionaceae.

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Piscirickettsia salmonis

Piscirickettsia salmonis is the bacterial causative agent of an epizootic disease in salmonid fishes, piscirickettsiosis.

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Plagues of Egypt

The Plagues of Egypt, also called the ten biblical plagues, were ten calamities that, according to the biblical Book of Exodus, God inflicted upon Egypt as a demonstration of power, after which the Pharaoh conceded to Moses' demands to let the enslaved Israelites go into the wilderness to make sacrifices.

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Public health genomics

Public health genomics is the use of genomics information to benefit public health.

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Rabies

Rabies is a viral disease that causes inflammation of the brain in humans and other mammals.

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Raccoon

The raccoon (or, Procyon lotor), sometimes spelled racoon, also known as the common raccoon, North American raccoon, or northern raccoon, is a medium-sized mammal native to North America.

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Raccoon dog

The raccoon dog (Nyctereutes procyonoides, from the Greek words nukt-, "night" + ereutēs, "wanderer" + prokuōn, "before-dog" + -oidēs, "similar to"), also known as the mangut (its Evenki name) is a canid indigenous to East Asia.

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Ranavirus

Ranavirus is a genus of viruses, in the family Iridoviridae.

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Red fox

The red fox (Vulpes vulpes) is the largest of the true foxes and one of the most widely distributed members of the order Carnivora, being present across the entire Northern Hemisphere from the Arctic Circle to North Africa, North America and Eurasia.

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Research Centre for Emerging and Reemerging Infectious Diseases

The Research Centre for Emerging and Reemerging Infectious Diseases is part of the Pasteur Institute of Iran.

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Rift Valley fever

Rift Valley fever (RVF) is a viral disease that can cause mild to severe symptoms.

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Rinderpest

Rinderpest (also cattle plague or steppe murrain) was an infectious viral disease of cattle, domestic buffalo, and many other species of even-toed ungulates, including buffaloes, large antelope and deer, giraffes, wildebeests, and warthogs.

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Rocio viral encephalitis

Rocio viral encephalitis is an epidemic flaviviral disease of humans first observed in São Paulo State, Brazil, in 1975.

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Round goby

The round goby (Neogobius melanostomus) is a euryhaline bottom-dwelling goby of the family Gobiidae, native to central Eurasia including the Black Sea and the Caspian Sea.

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Saiga antelope

The saiga antelope (Saiga tatarica) is a critically endangered antelope that originally inhabited a vast area of the Eurasian steppe zone from the foothills of the Carpathian Mountains and Caucasus into Dzungaria and Mongolia.

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Salmon louse

The salmon louse, Lepeophtheirus salmonis, is a species of copepod in the genus Lepeophtheirus.

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Second plague pandemic

The second plague pandemic is a major series of epidemics of the plague that started with the Black Death, which reached mainland Europe in 1348 and killed up to a half of the population of Eurasia in the next four years.

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Sendai virus

Sendai virus (SeV), previously also known as murine parainfluenza virus type 1 or hemagglutinating virus of Japan (HVJ), is a negative sense, single-stranded RNA virus of the family Paramyxoviridae, a group of viruses featuring, notably, the genera Morbillivirus and Rubulavirus.

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Siege of Perekop (1736)

The Siege of Perekop on June 17, 1736 was part of the Russo-Turkish War (1735–1739).

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Slaughterhouse

A slaughterhouse or abattoir is a facility where animals are slaughtered for consumption as food.

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Social Immunity

Social immunity (also termed collective immunity) describes the additional level of disease protection arising in social groups from collective disease defences, performed either jointly or towards one another.

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South Korea foot-and-mouth outbreak

A serious outbreak of foot-and-mouth disease occurred in South Korea in 2010–2011, leading to the culling of hundreds of thousands of pigs (as of January 2011) in an effort to contain it.

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Southern bluefin tuna

The southern bluefin tuna, Thunnus maccoyii, is a tuna of the family Scombridae found in open southern Hemisphere waters of all the world's oceans mainly between 30°S and 50°S, to nearly 60°S.

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Streptococcus agalactiae

Streptococcus agalactiae (also known as group B streptococcus or GBS) is a gram-positive coccus (round bacterium) with a tendency to form chains (as reflected by the genus name Streptococcus).

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Striped skunk

The striped skunk (Mephitis mephitis) is a skunk of the genus Mephitis that is native to southern Canada, the United States and northern Mexico.

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Sylvatic plague

Sylvatic plague is an infectious bacterial disease caused by the bacterium Yersinia pestis that primarily affects rodents such as prairie dogs.

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Taï Forest virus

Taï Forest virus (TAFV) is a close relative of the much more commonly known Ebola virus (EBOV).

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Tarbagan marmot

The Tarbagan marmot (Marmota sibirica) is a species of rodent in the family Sciuridae.

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Theories of the Black Death

Theories of the Black Death are a variety of explanations that have been advanced to explain the nature and transmission of the Black Death (1347–69).

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Timeline of Japanese history

This is a timeline of Japanese history, comprising important legal, territorial and cultural changes and political events in Japan and its predecessor states.

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Toque macaque

The toque macaque (Macaca sinica) is a reddish-brown-coloured Old World monkey endemic to Sri Lanka, where it is known as the rilewa or rilawa (Sinhala රිළවා), (hence "rillow" in the Oxford English Dictionary).

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TRACES

TRACES, or Trade Control and Expert System, is a web-based veterinarian certification tool used by the European Union for controlling the import and export of live animals and animal products within and without its borders.

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Turtle leech

Turtle leeches are a genus, Ozobranchus, of leeches (Hirudinea) that feed exclusively on the blood of turtles.

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Tyzzer's disease

Tyzzer’s disease is an acute epizootic bacterial disease found in rodents, rabbits, dogs, cats, birds, pandas, deer, foals, cattle, and other mammals including gerbils.

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Unfree labour

Unfree labour is a generic or collective term for those work relations, especially in modern or early modern history, in which people are employed against their will with the threat of destitution, detention, violence (including death), compulsion, or other forms of extreme hardship to themselves or members of their families.

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Urban plague

Urban plague is an infectious disease among rodent species that live in close association with humans in urban areas.

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Utrecht sodomy trials

The Utrecht sodomy trials (Dutch: Utrechtse sodomieprocessen) were a large-scale persecution of homosexuals that took place in the Dutch Republic, starting in the city of Utrecht in 1730.

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Vaalharts Valley

The Vaalharts Valley is located in the north-east corner of the Northern Cape province of South Africa, bordering the North West province.

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Venezuelan equine encephalitis virus

Venezuelan equine encephalitis virus is a mosquito-borne viral pathogen that causes Venezuelan equine encephalitis or encephalomyelitis (VEE).

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West Nile fever

West Nile fever is a viral infection typically spread by mosquitoes.

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White plague (coral disease)

White plague is a suite of coral diseases of which three types have been identified, initially in the Florida Keys.

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Wild boar

The wild boar (Sus scrofa), also known as the wild swine,Heptner, V. G.; Nasimovich, A. A.; Bannikov, A. G.; Hoffman, R. S. (1988), Volume I, Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution Libraries and National Science Foundation, pp.

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World Organisation for Animal Health

The World Organisation for Animal Health (OIE) is an intergovernmental organization coordinating, supporting and promoting animal disease control.

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World Veterinary Association

The World Veterinary Association is a federation representing more than eighty veterinary medical associations around the world.

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Yellow fever

Yellow fever is a viral disease of typically short duration.

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Zambezi

The Zambezi (also spelled Zambeze and Zambesi) is the fourth-longest river in Africa, the longest east-flowing river in Africa and the largest flowing into the Indian Ocean from Africa.

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1890s African rinderpest epizootic

In the 1890s, an epizootic of the rinderpest virus struck Africa, considered to be "the most devastating epidemic to hit southern Africa in the late nineteenth century".

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2000s (decade)

The 2000s was a decade of the Gregorian calendar that began on January 1, 2000, and ended on December 31, 2009.

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2001 United Kingdom foot-and-mouth outbreak

The outbreak of foot-and-mouth disease in the United Kingdom in 2001 caused a crisis in British agriculture and tourism.

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2007 United Kingdom foot-and-mouth outbreak

A contained four-site outbreak of foot-and-mouth disease in the United Kingdom was found by regular livestock testing by the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (DEFRA), namely in August 2007 three times, and once the following month, all in the west of Surrey, England.

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Redirects here:

Epizootic disease, Epizootic diseases, Epizootics, Epizooty.

References

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Epizootic

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