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Journal of Systematic Palaeontology 5 (1), 1 (2007)
PLoS computational biology 5 (4), e1000346 (Apr 2009)
Posted by WildlifeDiseaseInformationNode and 2 others on Thu Apr 16 2009 at 17:09 UTC | info | related
Epidemiology and infection 137 (4), 464-72 (Apr 2009)
Poultry science 88 (4), 851-5 (Apr 2009)
PLoS Pathogens 4 (8), e1000127 (2008)
Vector-Borne and Zoonotic Diseases, 1-8 (2008)
0-proquest.umi.com.wizard.umd.umich.edu
David R Luukkonen, Harold H Prince, Richard C Mykut.David R Luukkonen, Harold H Prince, Richard C Mykut. 2008. Journal of Wildlife Management 72.2 (2008): 449-462
Journal of General Virology 89 (2), 509 (2008)
Little is known about the ecology and evolution of avian influenza in the natural environment, despite how these affect the potential for transmission. Most work has focused on characterizing viruses isolated from hosts such as waterfowl, and there have also been several instances of isolation and detection from abiotic sources such as water and ice. We used RT-PCR to amplify and characterize the influenza virus sequences present in sediments of ponds that are used heavily by waterfowl. The detection rate of influenza virus was high (>50 %). Characterization of the viruses present by sequencing part of the haemagglutinin (HA) gene showed that there is a diverse collection of viruses in these sediments. We sequenced 117 partial HA gene clones from 11 samples and detected four different HA subtypes (H3, H8, H11 and H12), with approximately 65 % of clone sequences being unique. This culture-independent approach was also able to detect a virus subtype that was not found by sampling of birds in the same geographical region in the same year. Viruses were detected readily in the winter when the ponds were frozen, indicating that these sediments could be a year-to-year reservoir of viruses to infect birds using the ponds, although we have not shown that these viruses are viable. We demonstrate that this approach is a feasible and valuable way to assess the prevalence and diversity of viruses present in the environment, and can be a valuable complement to more difficult viral culturing in attempting to understand the ecology of influenza viruses.
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