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In experiments to determine the current susceptibility to plague, it was demonstrated that 256 Yersinia pestis (a local strain of high virulence) were required to produce a 50% infectious dose (ID50) in California ground squirrels (Spermophilus beecheyi) that had been collected in southeastern Monterey County, California; 6,070 Y. pestis were required to produce a 50% lethal dose (LD50). (The LD50 was about 24 times the ID50.) The frequency of serologic response to the specific fraction 1 antigen of Y. pestis and mortality were dose-related. Approximately half of the squirrels inoculated with six to 6,070 Y. pestis survived without seroconversion, whereas antibody to specific fraction 1 antigen was always observed in squirrels that survived challenges of greater than or equal to 60,700 Y. pestis. However, titers never exceeded 1:64. The implications of these data for enzootic and epizootic transmission of plague in resistant squirrel populations are examined.
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