Skunk and raccoon rabies in the eastern United States: Temporal and spatial analysis

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Abstract

Since 1981, an epizootic of raccoon rabies has spread throughout the eastern United States. A concomitant increase in reported rabies cases in skunks has raised concerns that an independent maintenance cycle of rabies virus in skunks could become established, affecting current strategies of wildlife rabies control programs. Rabies surveillance data from 1981 through 2000 obtained from the health departments of 11 eastern states were used to analyze temporal and spatial characteristics of rabies epizootics in each species. Spatial analysis indicated that epizootics in raccoons and skunks moved in a similar direction from 1990 to 2000. Temporal regression analysis showed that the number of rabid raccoons predicted the number of rabid skunks through time, with a 1-month lag. In areas where the raccoon rabies virus variant is enzootic, spatiotemporal analysis does not provide evidence that this rabies virus variant is currently cycling independently among skunks.

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Guerra, M. A., Curns, A. T., Rupprecht, C. E., Hanlon, C. A., Krebs, J. W., & Childs, J. E. (2003). Skunk and raccoon rabies in the eastern United States: Temporal and spatial analysis. Emerging Infectious Diseases, 9(9), 1143–1150. https://doi.org/10.3201/eid0909.020608

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