Selected article for: "high prevalence and host specificity"

Author: Mendenhall, Ian H.; Skiles, Maggie M.; Neves, Erica Sena; Borthwick, Sophie A.; Low, Dolyce H.W.; Liang, Benjamin; Lee, Benjamin P.Y.-H.; Su, Yvonne C.F.; Smith, Gavin J.D.
Title: Influence of age and body condition on astrovirus infection of bats in Singapore: An evolutionary and epidemiological analysis
  • Document date: 2017_10_6
  • ID: xox1x6sb_1
    Snippet: Bats are the second most speciose group of mammals behind rodents [1], their species diversity provides opportunity for virus diversity through co-evolution [2] . The intensive surveillance in bats for zoonotic viruses has provided biological samples that are screened for other virus families that may not be of human public health importance or pathogenic to the reservoir, but may be informative of evolutionary processes of bat viruses due to the.....
    Document: Bats are the second most speciose group of mammals behind rodents [1], their species diversity provides opportunity for virus diversity through co-evolution [2] . The intensive surveillance in bats for zoonotic viruses has provided biological samples that are screened for other virus families that may not be of human public health importance or pathogenic to the reservoir, but may be informative of evolutionary processes of bat viruses due to their high prevalence [3, 4] . In addition to zoonotic viruses, such as Ebola and SARS-CoV, there are a number of commonly detected viruses that demonstrate varying degrees of host specificity at genus or species level [5] [6] [7] .

    Search related documents:
    Co phrase search for related documents