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	<title>Symptom Advice .com &#187; deer mouse</title>
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		<title>Dying Trees Make Way for Mice With Deadly Disease</title>
		<link>http://symptomadvice.com/dying-trees-make-way-for-mice-with-deadly-disease/</link>
		<comments>http://symptomadvice.com/dying-trees-make-way-for-mice-with-deadly-disease/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 22 Jan 2011 07:17:08 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Symptom Advice</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[lyme symptoms]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[deer mouse]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[lungs]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[mouse urine]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[SALT LAKE CITY &#8212; &#114;&#101;&#099;&#101;&#110;&#116; diebacks &#111;&#102; aspen trees &#105;&#110; the U.S. West may &#101;&#110;&#100; up increasing the risk posed by &#097; lethal human pathogen, &#097; &#110;&#101;&#119; study suggests. A tree-killing syndrome called sudden aspen decline that has wiped out swaths &#111;&#102; trees &#097;&#099;&#114;&#111;&#115;&#115; the West &#105;&#110; the past decade has also changed the kinds, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p></p><p><img src="http://symptomadvice.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/01/1295680628-21.jpg%3Fw%3D468%26h%3D455" style="clear:both;clear:both;margin:0 15px 15px 0;width:500px" />
<p>SALT LAKE CITY &#8212; &#114;&#101;&#099;&#101;&#110;&#116; diebacks &#111;&#102; aspen trees &#105;&#110; the U.S. West may &#101;&#110;&#100; up increasing the risk posed by &#097; lethal human pathogen, &#097; &#110;&#101;&#119; study suggests.</p>
<p>A tree-killing syndrome called sudden aspen decline that has wiped out swaths &#111;&#102; trees &#097;&#099;&#114;&#111;&#115;&#115; the West &#105;&#110; the past decade has also changed the kinds, numbers &#097;&#110;&#100; interactions &#111;&#102; creatures living around the trees, researchers have &#102;&#111;&#117;&#110;&#100; &#8212; including &#115;&#111;&#109;&#101; carriers &#111;&#102; human disease. Deer mice at hard-hit sites &#105;&#110; 2009 &#119;&#101;&#114;&#101; almost &#116;&#104;&#114;&#101;&#101; times as likely to carry sin nombre virus &#8212; which can &#098;&#101; fatal to humans &#8212; compared &#119;&#105;&#116;&#104; mice &#105;&#110; less-ravaged aspen stands, Erin Lehmer &#111;&#102; Fort Lewis College &#105;&#110; Durango, Colorado, &#097;&#110;&#100; &#104;&#101;&#114; colleagues reported Jan. 4 at the annual meeting &#111;&#102; the Society &#102;&#111;&#114; Integrative &#097;&#110;&#100; Comparative Biology.</p>
<p>The deer mouse Peromyscus maniculatus looks ironically cute &#105;&#110; pictures at meeting presentations, but the Centers &#102;&#111;&#114; Disease Control &#097;&#110;&#100; Prevention ranks &#105;&#116; as the main rodent reservoir &#102;&#111;&#114; sin nombre virus. Infected deer mice don&#8217;t &#115;&#104;&#111;&#119; many symptoms, but people inhaling virus wafting from mouse urine &#111;&#114; saliva can &#103;&#101;&#116; quite sick &#119;&#105;&#116;&#104; hantavirus pulmonary syndrome.</p>
<p>Unknown to medicine until 1993, hantavirus pulmonary syndrome &#115;&#116;&#097;&#114;&#116;&#115; &#119;&#105;&#116;&#104; muscle aches, chills, fever &#097;&#110;&#100; stomach upset. Later, fluid fills the lungs; more &#116;&#104;&#097;&#110; &#097; &#116;&#104;&#105;&#114;&#100; &#111;&#102; victims have died. &#105;&#110; 2010, the CDC logged 560 cases &#105;&#110; 32 states stretching from California to Maine, but &#109;&#111;&#115;&#116;&#108;&#121; &#105;&#110; the West.</p>
<p>&#8220;&#098;&#111;&#116;&#104; plant diseases &#097;&#110;&#100; animal diseases &#097;&#114;&#101; rapidly emerging globally, &#097;&#110;&#100; &#119;&#101; should &#098;&#101; &#108;&#111;&#111;&#107;&#105;&#110;&#103; &#102;&#111;&#114; ways that the &#116;&#119;&#111; might interact,” said Richard Ostfeld &#111;&#102; the Cary Institute &#111;&#102; Ecosystem Studies &#105;&#110; Millbrook, &#110;&#101;&#119; York, &#119;&#104;&#111; studies Lyme disease transmission.</p>
<p>What caused sudden aspen decline &#115;&#101;&#101;&#109;&#115; to &#098;&#101; more complex &#116;&#104;&#097;&#110; &#097; single pathogen, Lehmer noted. Severe drought from the late 1990s into the 2000s stressed aspens, &#097;&#110;&#100; &#116;&#104;&#101;&#110; may have allowed cankers, fungi &#097;&#110;&#100; other maladies to deliver death blows.</p>
<p>Lehmer &#097;&#110;&#100; &#104;&#101;&#114; colleagues compared aspen stands &#119;&#105;&#116;&#104; minimal, moderate &#097;&#110;&#100; high &#100;&#097;&#109;&#097;&#103;&#101; &#105;&#110; the San Juan Mountains &#111;&#102; Colorado. &#105;&#110; places that still had &#109;&#111;&#115;&#116; &#111;&#102; &#116;&#104;&#101;&#105;&#114; aspens, researchers &#102;&#111;&#117;&#110;&#100; more species &#111;&#102; small mammals &#116;&#104;&#097;&#110; &#105;&#110; the devastated plots. &#097;&#110;&#100; &#105;&#110; the healthier aspen stands, the &#109;&#111;&#115;&#116; abundant small mammal was the montane vole, which doesn&#8217;t make &#097; &#103;&#111;&#111;&#100; host &#102;&#111;&#114; the virus.</p>
<p>In study sites that had lost at &#108;&#101;&#097;&#115;&#116; two-thirds &#111;&#102; &#116;&#104;&#101;&#105;&#114; aspens, the researchers &#102;&#111;&#117;&#110;&#100; &#102;&#101;&#119;&#101;&#114; species &#111;&#102; small mammals. The &#109;&#111;&#115;&#116; abundant &#111;&#102; &#116;&#104;&#111;&#115;&#101; species was the deer mouse, which isn&#8217;t as choosy &#097;&#098;&#111;&#117;&#116; &#105;&#116;&#115; habitat as the vole &#105;&#115;. Lehmer speculated that infection might have risen &#097;&#109;&#111;&#110;&#103; deer mice as &#116;&#104;&#101;&#105;&#114; growing dominance &#105;&#110; the landscape let &#116;&#104;&#101;&#109; encounter &#101;&#097;&#099;&#104; other more frequently &#097;&#110;&#100; &#103;&#101;&#116; into more mouse fights. Sin nombre spreads readily &#097;&#109;&#111;&#110;&#103; rodents through bites.</p>
<p>Results from the aspen study so far &#115;&#101;&#101;&#109; to parallel the Lyme disease &#115;&#116;&#111;&#114;&#121;, Ostfeld &#115;&#097;&#121;&#115;. He &#097;&#110;&#100; his colleagues have &#102;&#111;&#117;&#110;&#100; that as people have fragmented habitat &#102;&#111;&#114; wild animals, species that make poor hosts &#102;&#111;&#114; the Lyme pathogen &#097;&#110;&#100; &#105;&#116;&#115; tick vector have dwindled &#105;&#110; number. &#105;&#110; &#116;&#104;&#101;&#115;&#101; &#108;&#101;&#115;&#115; diverse landscapes, however, the white-footed mice that carry Lyme disease thrive &#097;&#110;&#100; readily pass around infections So what&#8217;s &#098;&#097;&#100; &#102;&#111;&#114; wild habitat ends up being &#098;&#097;&#100; &#102;&#111;&#114; human health.</p>
<p>Image: David Cappaert/Michigan State University/Bugwood.org</p>
<p><strong>See Also:</strong></p>
<ul>
<li>Reproduction Hack Makes Mice From &#116;&#119;&#111; Dads</li>
<li>Mice Make &#116;&#104;&#101;&#105;&#114; Own Morphine</li>
<li>&#8216;Immortal&#8217; Trees Can&#8217;t Escape Aging</li>
<li>Virulent Bird-Human Flu Hybrid Made &#105;&#110; Lab</li>
</ul>
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