Pages that link to "Q43487321"
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The following pages link to A Field Study on the Effects of Fort Morgan Virus, an Arbovirus Transmitted by Swallow Bugs, on the Reproductive Success of Cliff Swallows and Symbiotic House Sparrows in Morgan County, Colorado, 1976 * (Q43487321):
Displaying 15 items.
- Bed bugs and infectious disease: a case for the arboviruses (Q21131376) (← links)
- Evolutionary genetics and vector adaptation of recombinant viruses of the western equine encephalitis antigenic complex provides new insights into alphavirus diversity and host switching (Q24701730) (← links)
- Spleen volume varies with colony size and parasite load in a colonial bird (Q27477745) (← links)
- Familiarity with breeding habitat improves daily survival in colonial cliff swallows (Q27487457) (← links)
- Isolation of Buggy Creek virus (Togaviridae: Alphavirus) from field-collected eggs of Oeciacus vicarius (Hemiptera: Cimicidae) (Q27489616) (← links)
- Stone Lakes virus (family Togaviridae, genus Alphavirus), a variant of Fort Morgan virus isolated from swallow bugs (Hemiptera: Cimicidae) west of the Continental Divide (Q27490365) (← links)
- Buggy Creek virus (Togaviridae: Alphavirus) upregulates expression of pattern recognition receptors and interferons in House Sparrows (Passer domesticus) (Q33731184) (← links)
- Winter ecology of Buggy Creek virus (Togaviridae, Alphavirus) in the Central Great Plains (Q33905040) (← links)
- Natural infection of vertebrate hosts by different lineages of Buggy Creek virus (family Togaviridae, genus Alphavirus) (Q33922674) (← links)
- Prevalence of Buggy Creek virus (Togaviridae: Alphavirus) in insect vectors increases over time in the presence of an invasive avian host (Q34020761) (← links)
- Group size and nest spacing affect Buggy Creek virus (Togaviridae: Alphavirus) infection in nestling house sparrows (Q34038385) (← links)
- Cliff swallows, swallow bugs, and West Nile virus: an unlikely transmission mechanism (Q34152255) (← links)
- Phylogenetic analysis of Buggy Creek virus: evidence for multiple clades in the Western Great Plains, United States of America (Q35130066) (← links)
- An enzootic vector-borne virus is amplified at epizootic levels by an invasive avian host (Q51178188) (← links)
- High costs of infection: Alphavirus infection reduces digestive function and bone and feather growth in nestling house sparrows (Passer domesticus). (Q52602659) (← links)