Abstract
Because of the epidemiological implications and its public health significance, the discovery of rabies infection in nonsanguivorous bats is believed to be of paramount importance in the United States. In June 1953 the Tampa laboratory of the Florida State Board of Health diagnosed rabies in a Florida yellow bat (Dasypterus floridanus) which had bitten a boy.1 Later, in September 1953, the Pennsylvania Bureau of Animal Industry isolated in rabbits a virus which was the cause of rabic infection in
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