| histopathological changes in some of the organs in heart worm infection in an indian fox (vulpes bengalensis). | | 1971 | 5104206 |
| use of xylazine hydrochloride-ketamine hydrochloride for immobilization of indian fox (vulpes bengalensis) in field situations. | reports on doses of anesthetic agents for safe and effective immobilization of most wild species occurring in india are very limited. further, the anesthetic agents available in india for field immobilizations are limited to xylazine hydrochloride and ketamine hydrochloride. a safe and effective dosage of xylazine-ketamine for indian fox (vulpes bengalensis) is reported, based on 37 wild indian fox immobilizations between april 2006 and may 2007. foxes captured for a radiotelemetry and health mo ... | 2013 | 24063107 |
| importance of native grassland habitat for den-site selection of indian foxes in a fragmented landscape. | fragmentation of native habitats is now a ubiquitous phenomenon affecting wildlife at various scales. we examined selection of den-sites (n = 26) by indian foxes (vulpes bengalensis) in a highly modified short-grassland landscape in central india (jan-may, 2010). at the scale of the home-range, defined by an 800 m circular buffer around den sites, we examined the effect of land-cover edges and roads on selection of sites for denning using a distance-based approach. at the smaller den-area scale, ... | 2013 | 24098494 |
| examining human-carnivore interactions using a socio-ecological framework: sympatric wild canids in india as a case study. | many carnivores inhabit human-dominated landscapes outside protected reserves. spatially explicit assessments of carnivore distributions and livestock depredation patterns in human-use landscapes are crucial for minimizing negative interactions and fostering coexistence between people and predators. india harbours 23% of the world's carnivore species that share space with 1.3 billion people in approximately 2.3% of the global land area. we examined carnivore distributions and human-carnivore int ... | 2019 | 31218031 |
| epidemiology of viral pathogens of free-ranging dogs and indian foxes in a human-dominated landscape in central india. | there is an increasing concern that free-ranging domestic dog (canis familiaris) populations may serve as reservoirs of pathogens which may be transmitted to wildlife. we documented the prevalence of antibodies to three viral pathogens, canine parvovirus (cpv), canine distemper virus (cdv) and canine adenovirus (cav), in free-ranging dog and sympatric indian fox (vulpes bengalensis) populations in and around the great indian bustard wildlife sanctuary, in maharashtra, central india. a total of 2 ... | 2014 | 25135467 |