Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Mariel L. Campbell is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Mariel L. Campbell.


Journal of Parasitology | 1992

Parasites As Probes for Biodiversity

Scott Lyell Gardner; Mariel L. Campbell

Cestodes of the genus Linstowia, parasitic in marsupials, show patterns of coevolution and ancient historical-ecological connections. Correlated with the breakup of the austral landmasses (Gondwanaland) of the Neotropical and Australian regions from the Antarctic continent, the age of this host-parasite community is estimated to be between 60 and 70 million years old. Based on the data from the survey of parasites of mammals from throughout Bolivia and from the phylogenetic analysis of the cestodes, we urge the planners of biodiversity preserves in the neotropics to consider the Yungas of Bolivia as a region that supports an ancient ecological community worthy of consideration as a biopreserve.


Journal of Wildlife Diseases | 1998

SMALL MAMMAL SURVIVAL AND TRAPABILITY IN MARK-RECAPTURE MONITORING PROGRAMS FOR HANTAVIRUS

Cheryl A. Parmenter; Terry L. Yates; Robert R. Parmenter; James N. Mills; James E. Childs; Mariel L. Campbell; Jonathan L. Dunnum; Janie Milner

Following the 1993 hantavirus pulmonary syndrome (HPS) epidemic in the southwestern United States, mammalogists and epidemiologists instituted long-term studies to monitor population density and prevalence of infection in rodents which constitute the reservoir for Sin Nombre virus (SNV). In this study, field techniques used in sampling small mammals for SNV infection were evaluated to determine if trapping and handling protocols were having significant effects on future trapability or mortality of animals. We compared rodent mark-recapture control plots, on which all rodents were simply measured, marked, and released on site, with experimental plots on which all animals were anesthetized with methoxyflurane, sampled for blood and saliva, measured, marked, and released. Blood samples were obtained from anesthetized animals on the experimental plots via a retro-orbital sinus puncture using a heparinized capillary tube. Dacron tipped oral swabs were used to collect buccal cells and saliva from the rodents oral cavity. Field data were collected monthly from August 1994 to August 1996 at two sites in New Mexico (USA). Analyses were based on 3,661 captures of 1,513 individuals representing 21 species from three rodent families (Rodentia: Muridae, Heteromyidae, Sciuridae) and two species of rabbits (Lagomorpha: Leporidae). Overall, for most murid rodents (including five Peromyscus spp., Neotoma albigula, and Onychomys leucogaster) and one rabbit species (Sylvilagus floridanus), the handling/bleeding procedures had no significant effects on recapture rates or mortality. In contrast, several species of heteromyids (Dipodomys ordii and Perognathus flavus), one murid (Reithrodontomys megalotis) and one leporid (S. auduboni) suffered higher mortality rates, and heteromyid kangaroo rats (D. ordii and D. merriami) exhibited lower trapability as a result of the anesthesia and sampling procedures. In view of the overall non-significant influence of the sampling procedures on murid rodents, the anesthesia and blood/saliva sampling protocols described herein appear to be appropriate for hantavirus research, and may serve as a model for environmental monitoring of other zoonotic agents and their reservoirs.


Journal of Parasitology | 2003

A NEW SPECIES OF MATHEVOTAENIA (CESTODA: ANOPLOCEPHALIDAE) AND OTHER TAPEWORMS FROM MARSUPIALS IN ARGENTINA

Mariel L. Campbell; Scott Lyell Gardner; Graciela T. Navone

Cestodes are reported from Didelphis albiventris Lund, 1840 and Micoureus cinereus Temminck, 1824 (Marsupialia: Didelphidae) in Argentina. These include a new species of Mathevotaenia Akhumyan, 1946 (Cestoda: Anoplocephalata) as well as M. bivittata (Janicki, 1904) and an unknown hymenolepidid cestode. Mathevotaenia argentinensis n. sp. is characterized by a relatively narrow strobila, 18–37 mm in total length and 1.0–1.5 mm in maximum width, 135–163 craspedote proglottids, 19–27 testes, and a muscular genital atrium. This species differs from M. didelphidis (Rudolphi, 1819) in the disposition of the genital ducts between the excretory canals and in the entrance of the vagina into the genital atrium posterior to the cirrus pouch; from M. paraguayae Schmidt and Martin, 1978 in the disposition of the genital ducts, absence of a seminal receptacle, and presence of an armed cirrus; and from M. boliviana Sawada and Harada, 1986 and M. pennsylvanica Chandler and Melvin, 1951 in the presence of an armed cirrus. Linstowiines appear to be the dominant cestodes in New World marsupials, with M. bivittata representing the most prevalent and widely distributed species. The hymenolepidid is the first record of this family in Neotropical marsupials.


Journal of Parasitology | 2008

Endoparasites of Fat-Tailed Mouse Opossums (Thylamys: Didelphidae) from Northwestern Argentina and Southern Bolivia, with the Description of a New Species of Tapeworm

F. Agustín Jiménez; Janet K. Braun; Mariel L. Campbell; Scott Lyell Gardner

The parasite fauna of 2 species of fat-tailed mouse opossums from northwestern Argentina is herein presented. Five species of helminths were found, i.e., Pterygodermatites kozeki, Hoineffia simplispicula, Oligacanthorhynchus sp., and a new species of tapeworm, Mathevotaenia sanmartini n. sp. (Cyclophyllidea: Anoplocephalidae). The new species is characterized by a calyciform scolex, relatively few testes (32), and a long cirrus sac; it occurs in fat-tailed mouse opossums at localities above 4,000 m. Those characters make it different from 6 species known to occur in marsupials from the New World, and from other species occurring in armadillos and bats. Didelphoxyuris thylamisis, H. simplicispicula, and Oligacanthorhynchus sp. appear to occur in marmosas from the Yungas region. In contrast, both P. kozeki and M. sanmartini n. sp. appear to occur exclusively in the Puna.


Mammalia | 1994

New records of Bolivian mammals

J.A. Salazar; Mariel L. Campbell; S. Anderson; Scott Lyell Gardner; Jonathan L. Dunnum

Nous presentons de nouvelles donnees sur des mammiferes boliviens qui ont ete collectes en 1991 et 1992. Nous rapportons la decouverte des premiers specimens de Chironectes minimus de Bolivie ainsi que des nouvelles localites de capture de Monodelphis kunsi et Dactylomys boliviensis


Journal of Parasitology | 1992

A New Species of Linstowia (Cestoda: Anoplocephalidae) from Marsupials in Bolivia

Scott Lyell Gardner; Mariel L. Campbell

A new species of cestode of the genus Linstowia (Cestoda: Anoplocephalidae) is described from marsupials of the genera Thylamys and Monodelphis. The new species (Linstowia schmidti) differs from Linstowia iheringi Zschokke, 1904, in having a much smaller strobila and reduced number of proglottids, and in the distribution of the eggs in gravid proglottids. In Bolivia, cestodes of the genus Linstowia appear to have a restricted geographic distribution, occurring in marsupials only in southeastern Bolivia near the western margin of the Chaco. This host-parasite association may represent an ecological-historical relict.


Biodiversity Information Science and Standards | 2018

Establishment of the ARCTOS-GGBN Data Pipeline

Teresa Mayfield; Mariel L. Campbell; Kyndall Hildebrandt; Carla Cicero; Dusty McDonald; Joseph A. Cook; John R. Demboski

Arctos (https://arctosdb.org), an online collection management information system, was developed in 1999 to manage museum specimen data and to make those data publicly available. The portal (arctos.database.museum) now serves data on over 3.5 million cataloged specimens from more than 130 collections throughout North America in an instance at the Texas Advanced Computing Center. Arctos also is a community of museum professionals that collaborates on museum best practices and works together to improve Arctos data richness and functionality for on-line museum data streaming. In 2017, three large Arctos genomics collections at the Museum of Southwestern Biology (MSB), Museum of Vertebrate Zoology, Berkeley (MVZ), and University of Alaska Museum of the North (UAM), received support from GGBN to create a pipeline for publishing data from Arctos to the GGBN portal. Modifications to Arctos included standardization of controlled vocabulary for tissues; changes to the data structure and code tables with regard to permit information, container history, part attributes, and sample quality; implementation of interfaces and protocols for parent-child relationships between tissues, tissue subsamples, and DNA extracts; and coordination with the DWC community to ensure that all GGBN data standards and formatting are included in the standard DWC export in order to finalize the pipeline to GGBN. The addition of these three primary Arctos biorepositories to the GGBN network will add over 750,000 tissue and DNA records representing over 11,000 species ‡ ‡ § | ¶ ‡ #


Arctic Science | 2016

Arctic Museum Collections--Special Issue The Beringian Coevolution Project: Holistic Collections of Mammals and Associated Parasites Reveal Novel Perspectives on Evolutionary and Environmental Change in the North

Joseph A. Cook; Kurt E. Galbreath; Kayce C. Bell; Mariel L. Campbell; Suzanne Carrière; Jocelyn P. Colella; Natalie G. Dawson; Jonathan L. Dunnum; Ralph P. Eckerlin; Stephen E. Greiman; Vadim B. Fedorov; Genevieve M.S. Haas; Voitto Haukisalmi; Heikki Henttonen; Andrew G. Hope; Donavan Jackson; Tom Jung; Anson V. Koehler; John M. Kinsella; Dianna Kresja; Susan J. Kutz; Schuyler Liphardt; S. O. MacDonald; Jason L. Malaney; Arseny A. Makarikov; Jon Martin; Bryan S. McLean; Robert Mulders; Batsaikhan Nyamsuren; Sandra L. Talbot

The Beringian Coevolution Project (BCP), a field program underway in the high northern latitudes since 1999, has focused on building key scientific infrastructure for integrated specimen-based studies on mammals and their associated parasites. BCP has contributed new insights across temporal and spatial scales into how ancient climate and environmental change have shaped faunas, emphasizing processes of assembly, persistence, and diversification across the vast Beringian region. BCP collections also represent baseline records of biotic diversity from across the northern high latitudes at a time of accelerated environmental change. These specimens and associated data form an unmatched resource for identifying hidden diversity, interpreting past responses to climate oscillations, documenting contemporary conditions, and anticipating outcomes for complex biological systems in a regime of ecological perturbation. Because of its dual focus on hosts and parasites, the BCP record also provides a foundation for c...


American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 1998

A survey of hantavirus antibody in small-mammal populations in selected United States National Parks.

James N. Mills; Jerry M. Johnson; Thomas G. Ksiazek; Barbara A. Ellis; Pierre E. Rollin; Terry L. Yates; Michael O. Mann; Mark R. Johnson; Mariel L. Campbell; Jennifer Miyashiro; Michael Patrick; Michael Zyzak; Dave Lavender; Mark G. Novak; Karina Schmidt; C. J. Peters; James E. Childs


Southwestern Naturalist | 1991

Effects of an 11-Year Livestock Exclosure on Rodent and Ant Numbers in the Chihuahuan Desert, Southeastern Arizona

Edward J. Heske; Mariel L. Campbell

Collaboration


Dive into the Mariel L. Campbell's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Scott Lyell Gardner

University of Nebraska–Lincoln

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Joseph A. Cook

University of New Mexico

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Andrew G. Hope

University of New Mexico

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Carla Cicero

University of California

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge