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Dive into the research topics where Carl J. Jones is active.

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Featured researches published by Carl J. Jones.


Journal of Medical Entomology | 2000

Populations of Ixodes scapularis (Acari: Ixodidae) are modulated by drought at a lyme disease focus in illinois.

Carl J. Jones; Uriel Kitron

Abstract From 1990 through 1997, Ixodes scapularis Say larvae and nymphs were sampled between May and October along a 400-m segment of a nature trail in a Lyme disease endemic site in northern Illinois. Ticks were removed from Peromyscus leucopus mice and collected via tick drags at ≈3-wk intervals. Mouse population estimates along the trail varied from 2, in the spring of 1996 following a year of drought, to >200 in 1993, the wettest year on record. During the 8-yr period, there were major droughts during the summers of 1991 and 1995. Cumulative degree-days were positively correlated with the number of ticks collected on drags in the same year and negatively correlated with larval tick populations for the following year (P < 0.05). Cumulative rainfall was positively correlated with larval tick abundance for the following year. This was most readily apparent by examination of the larval density on captured mice. In the year following each of two drought years, larval densities were significantly depressed compared with the 8-yr average at the site.


Journal of Wildlife Diseases | 1997

ROLE OF THE EASTERN CHIPMUNK (TAMIAS STRIATUS) IN THE EPIZOOTIOLOGY OF LYME BORRELIOSIS IN NORTHWESTERN ILLINOIS, USA

Timothy L. Slajchert; Uriel Kitron; Carl J. Jones; Alessandro Mannelli

The role of the eastern chipmunk (Tamias striatus) in the epizootiology of Lyme borreliosis was evaluated in Castle Rock State Park, Illinois (USA), an enzootic region, from June to August 1993. Prevalence, intensity, and molting rate of immature Ixodes scapularis were determined for chipmunks, white footed mice (Peromyscus leucopus), and raccoons (Procyon lotor). Chipmunks were the primary host for I. scapularis nymphs and an important secondary host for I. scapularis larvae. Based upon ear punch biopsy analysis, B. burgdorferi prevalence in chipmunks was similar to that of mice in August and greater than that of mice in June and July. Thus we propose that chipmunks are the primary source of B. burgdorferi infection for I. scapularis nymphs and an important secondary source of infection for larvae.


Preventive Veterinary Medicine | 1991

Use of the ARC/INFO GIS to study the distribution of Lyme disease ticks in an Illinois county

Uriel Kitron; John K. Bouseman; Carl J. Jones

Abstract Lyme disease is a bacterial disease of humans and domestic animals transmitted primarily through the bite of the deer tick, Ixodes dammini . Using the ARC/INFO geographic information system (GIS), the distribution of tick vectors can be associated simultaneously with a large number of environmental, biological and demographic factors. The Illinois GIS was used to study the associations of soil type, potential vegetation cover and distance from waterways with tick distributions, and to compare the dispersion patterns of tick-infested and uninfested deer in one northwestern Illinois county. Tick presence was associated with sandy soils, wooded vegetation, and proximity to rivers. Infested deer were clustered around an endemic focus I. dammini , while uninfested deer showed no such clustering. Changes in the spatial distribution of ticks over two years and likely sites for further establishment of ticks were also studied.


Journal of Parasitology | 1991

Spatial and temporal dispersion of immature Ixodes dammini on Peromyscus leucopus in northwestern Illinois.

Uriel Kitron; Carl J. Jones; John K. Bouseman

Infestation by immature Ixodes dammini and infection by Borrelia burgdorferi of the white-footed mouse Peromyscus leucopus were studied in Castle Rock State Park in northwestern Illinois during June-October 1990. Prevalence and intensity of infestation of larvae on mice were highest in August with a smaller peak in early June. The distribution of larvae on mice was highly aggregated during each of the sampling periods. Aggregation appears to be the result of a series of nonrandom successful attachments by single larvae, rather than of simultaneous attachment by clumps of larvae. Infection rate of mice by B. burgdorferi averaged 21.4% with a peak of 28.6% in August. A comparison of the numbers of attached immature ticks collected from mice and of questing ticks collected through dragging indicated that the larvae-to-nymph ratio was higher on mice than on drags. Given the low total numbers of nymphs collected from mice, this suggests a potential role for other hosts of I. dammini nymphs in northwestern Illinois.


Journal of Parasitology | 1994

Influence of season and habitat on Ixodes scapularis infestation on white-footed mice in Northwestern Illinois

Alessandro Mannelli; Uriel Kitron; Carl J. Jones; Timothy L. Slajchert

The effects of season and habitat on the infestation of the white-footed mouse (Peromyscus leucopus) by immature Ixodes scapularis were studied at Castle Rock State Park, northwestern Illinois, during June-October 1991. Relative density of larvae on mice was higher in mid-late summer (13.7 ticks per mouse) than during the rest of the study period, whereas prevalence of nymphal infestation was highest in early summer (33.3%). Relative density of I. scapularis larvae and prevalence of nymphs on mice did not differ significantly among bottomland forest, field-forest ecotone, and upland forest habitats. In bottomland forest, total number of ticks collected from mice (472 larvae and 13 nymphs) and P. leucopus population density (6.6 mice per 0.36 ha) were higher than in the other habitats. Temporal patterns of numbers of larvae collected from mice and through dragging in bottomland forest were significantly correlated.


Metabolism-clinical and Experimental | 1988

Biochemical changes in rhesus monkey during the first days after streptozotocin administration are indicative of selective β cell destruction

Glenn Takimoto; Carl J. Jones; William E.M. Lands; Anne Bauman; James Jeffrey; Olga Jonasson

Hormonal and glycemic changes in 22 rhesus monkeys were characterized during the first days after treatment with streptozotocin (STZ) (45 to 55 mg/kg, administered intravenously [IV]). Almost half (10/22) of the monkeys developed insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (STZ-IDDM) within five days following injection. Four of the remaining monkeys did not become insulin dependent for at least 6 months after STZ treatment, during which time they were considered non-insulin-dependent, and eight monkeys never required exogenous insulin. In the STZ-IDDM group, plasma immunoreactive c-peptide (IRC-P) levels fell by three hours after STZ from a mean +/- SEM of 252 +/- 82 to 101 +/- 45 pg/mL, as glucose and immunoreactive glucagon (IRG) levels increased from 65 +/- 3 and 120 +/- 37, respectively, to 336 +/- 43 mg/dL and 234 +/- 52 pg/mL, respectively. Between six and 30 hours after treatment, IRC-P increased to a peak of 1,561 +/- 360 pg/mL before falling permanently to less than 60 pg/mL by 66 hours. During this period, glucose and IRG responded in a reciprocal fashion by falling and then increasing to levels above 300 mg/dL and 300 pg/mL, respectively, by 66 hours. In the non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (STZ-NIDDM) group, no clear reciprocal relationship between IRC-P and glucose and IRG was obtained. In nine additional monkeys subjected to total pancreatectomy (Px), IRC-P and IRG levels fell immediately and permanently by greater than 90% and 75%, respectively. Levels of immunoreactive somatostatin increased steadily over the initial 96 hours following STZ, but did so both STZ-IDDM and Px monkey groups.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Veterinary Parasitology | 1999

A comparison of the bioequivalence of 0.5% fenbendazole top dress pellets or 10% fenbendazole oral suspension against a spectrum of equine parasites

Douglas E. Hutchens; Allan J. Paul; J.A. DiPietro; T.F. Lock; Carl J. Jones; D.D Rowley; R.W Wallace

A controlled test was conducted to assess the efficacy bioequivalence of a single dose of 0.5% fenbendazole (FBZ) top dress pellets to a 10% FBZ suspension formulation (Panacur suspension 10%, Hoechst Roussel Vet). Thirty horses with naturally-acquired parasite infections, in replicates of three, were used. Strongyle egg per gram counts were not significantly different (P>0.1) between groups pretreatment, but FBZ treated groups were significantly different from the control group post-treatment. At necropsy, which occurred seven to nine days post-treatment, two methods of nematode recovery were compared to assess whether a small aliquot can be used in a control test to determine efficacy against large as well as small strongyles. Both post mortem worm recovery techniques revealed similar efficacies of both formulations (>95%) against small and large strongyles, but large differences in the number of worms recovered. Six species of small strongyles comprised 96% of all the small strongyles recovered: Coronocyclus coronatus, Cylicocyclus insigne, Cylicostephanus longibursatus, Cylicocyclus brevicapsulatus, Cylicocyclus nassatus, and Cyathostomum catinatum. The results of this study demonstrated therapeutic bioequivalence between FBZ formulations and also the need to sample at least a 10% aliquot to accurately estimate number of large strongyles. No adverse reactions to treatment were detected.


Journal of Medical Entomology | 1992

Spatial Analysis of the Distribution of Ixodes dammini (Acari: Ixodidae) on White-Tailed Deer in Ogle County, Illinois

Uriel Kitron; Carl J. Jones; John K. Bouseman; Jeffrey A. Nelson; Donald L. Baumgartner


Journal of Economic Entomology | 1998

Releases of Spalangia nigroaenea and Muscidifurax zaraptor (Hymenoptera: Pteromalidae) increase rates of parasitism and total mortality of stable fly and house fly (Diptera: Muscidae) pupae in Illinois cattle feedlots.

Richard A. Weinzierl; Carl J. Jones


Environmental Entomology | 1997

Geographical and Temporal Variation in Pteromalid (Hymenoptera: Pteromalidae) Parasitism of Stable Fly and House Fly (Diptera: Muscidae) Pupae Collected from Illinois Cattle Feedlots

Carl J. Jones; Richard A. Weinzierl

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Jerome A. Hogsette

United States Department of Agriculture

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John K. Bouseman

University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign

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David L. Prichard

Agricultural Research Service

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