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The death of an unvaccinated horse from Hendra virus this week in southeast Queensland is the state’s first reported case in three years. Before that, Australia’s last case was in July 2023, when ...
A young woman has died and another individual remains in intensive care due to infection with the Nipah virus, a rare but potentially deadly pathogen currently under close monitoring by the ...
KOZHIKODE: Prof. Stephen Luby, the Professor of Medicine (Infectious Diseases & Geographic Medicine) at Stanford University in the United States, has said Pteropus genus fruit bat hosts the Nipah ...
The natural reservoir of the Nipah virus is fruit bats (genus Pteropus), also known as flying foxes. Infected fruit bats can spread the virus to people or other animals, such as pigs.
Chinese scientists have raised concerns over 20 never-seen-before viruses found in the kidneys of bats mostly found in the Yunnan province of the country. According to researchers, the viruses—closely ...
Nature - Relationships between the Flying Fox (Genus Pteropus) and Arthropod-borne Fevers of North Queensland Skip to main content Thank you for visiting nature.com.
Species sampled and DNA extraction. Individuals of three species from the genus Pteropus were analysed. These species are P. scapulatus, P. alecto and P. poliocephalus.Genomic DNA was extracted ...
But it turns out the pigs actually got the virus from another animal: It’s now known that fruit bats belonging to the genus Pteropus (otherwise called flying foxes) are the native carriers of Nipah.
image: Roosting Rodrigue's fruit bat (Pteropus rodricensis), one of the studied species. Note the large frontally positioned eyes. view more Credit: Dana LeBlanc, Lubee Bat Center, Gainesville, Fla.
Nipah virus is naturally found in fruit bats of the genus Pteropus, though it can jump to other animals, including humans, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).The ...
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