Results 191 to 200 of about 20,900 (232)
First Detection of an Alphaherpesvirus Gene in Humpback Whale Blow Samples Collected Noninvasively Using Unmanned Aerial Vehicles. [PDF]
Sekine W +9 more
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Geographical Distribution of Carnivore Hosts and Genotypes of Canine Distemper Virus (CDV) Worldwide: A Scoping Review and Spatial Meta-Analysis. [PDF]
Wipf A +5 more
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Paramyxo- and coronavirus diversity and host associations in non-volant small mammals: evidence of viral sharing. [PDF]
Mortlock M +7 more
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Biosecurity and Vaccines for Emerging Aquatic Animal RNA Viruses. [PDF]
Ahmadivand S, Savage ACNP, Palic D.
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Novel and classical morbilliviruses: Current knowledge of three divergent morbillivirus groups
Microbiology and immunology, 2022Currently, seven species of morbillivirus have been classified. Six of these species (Measles morbillivirus, Rinderpest morbillivirus, Small ruminant morbillivirus, Canine morbillivirus, Phocine morbillivirus, and Cetacean morbillivirus) are highly ...
Fumio Seki, M. Takeda
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Origin and spreading of canine morbillivirus in South America.
Virus Research, 2022Canine distemper virus (CDV) is a Morbillivirus (Canine morbillivirus) that greatly impacts domestic and wildlife carnivores worldwide. The CDV RNA genome has high genetic variability, evidenced by several lineages that follow a global geographic pattern.
Fuques E +11 more
semanticscholar +1 more source
Ultrastructure of equine morbillivirus
Virus Research, 1996The ultrastructure of the equine morbillivirus (EMV) which was implicated in the death of one human and fourteen horses in Queensland, Australia during September 1994 and a 36 year old man from Queensland in October 1995 is described. The ultrastructure of the virus and the intracellular virus-specific structures are characteristic for the family ...
A D, Hyatt, P W, Selleck
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The Veterinary Journal, 2000
Hendra has been recognized in Australia as a new zoonotic disease of horses since 1994/5 and subsequent work has shown that the viral agent is endemic in certain species of fruit bat. The Hendra virus is the type species of a new genus within the sub-family Paramyxovirinae, which also contains another newly identified zoonotic bat virus, namely Nipah ...
A J, Barclay, D J, Paton
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Hendra has been recognized in Australia as a new zoonotic disease of horses since 1994/5 and subsequent work has shown that the viral agent is endemic in certain species of fruit bat. The Hendra virus is the type species of a new genus within the sub-family Paramyxovirinae, which also contains another newly identified zoonotic bat virus, namely Nipah ...
A J, Barclay, D J, Paton
openaire +2 more sources

