Landscape Utilisation, Animal Behaviour and Hendra Virus Risk

scientific article published on 24 September 2015

Landscape Utilisation, Animal Behaviour and Hendra Virus Risk is …
instance of (P31):
scholarly articleQ13442814

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P6179Dimensions Publication ID1001677242
P356DOI10.1007/S10393-015-1066-8
P698PubMed publication ID26403793
P5875ResearchGate publication ID282243807

P50authorDina DechmannQ62565523
P2093author name stringJ Thompson
C S Smith
D Melville
H E Field
C E de Jong
N Kung
A Broos
P2860cites workHendra virus infection dynamics in Australian fruit batsQ21560896
Henipavirus susceptibility to environmental variablesQ24598345
Foraging behaviour and landscape utilisation by the endangered golden-crowned flying fox (Acerodon jubatus), the PhilippinesQ27302642
Emerging infectious diseases of wildlife--threats to biodiversity and human healthQ29617659
Flying-fox species density--a spatial risk factor for Hendra virus infection in horses in eastern AustraliaQ33768877
Isolation of Hendra virus from pteropid bats: a natural reservoir of Hendra virusQ33910042
The natural history of Hendra and Nipah virusesQ33945324
Identifying Hendra virus diversity in pteropid batsQ34043038
Investigation of the climatic and environmental context of Hendra virus spillover events 1994-2010.Q34092476
Isolation of Nipah virus from Malaysian Island flying-foxesQ34117157
Human Hendra virus encephalitis associated with equine outbreak, Australia, 2008.Q34216124
Infection of humans and horses by a newly described morbillivirusQ34299282
Hendra virus infection in a veterinarian.Q34583061
Pteropid bats are confirmed as the reservoir hosts of henipaviruses: a comprehensive experimental study of virus transmissionQ35494618
Natural Hendra Virus Infection in Flying-Foxes - Tissue Tropism and Risk FactorsQ35659406
Experimental infection of horses with Hendra virus/Australia/horse/2008/RedlandsQ35849111
Serologic evidence for the presence in Pteropus bats of a paramyxovirus related to equine morbillivirusQ37062261
Henipaviruses-unanswered questions of lethal zoonosesQ37996232
Ecological aspects of hendra virusQ38000046
Fatal encephalitis due to novel paramyxovirus transmitted from horses.Q39114535
Survival of hendra virus in the environment: modelling the effect of temperatureQ42230495
Field anaesthesia of three Australian species of flying fox.Q44937495
Transmission studies of Hendra virus (equine morbillivirus) in fruit bats, horses and catsQ45751332
Collection, seminal characteristics and chilled storage of spermatozoa from three species of free-range flying fox (Pteropus spp.).Q46507425
Urban habituation, ecological connectivity and epidemic dampening: the emergence of Hendra virus from flying foxes (Pteropus spp.).Q51163914
Latitudinal range shifts in Australian flying-foxes: A re-evaluationQ57067161
A morbillivirus that caused fatal disease in horses and humansQ57110236
Susceptibility of cats to equine morbillivirusQ71730673
Outbreak of Severe Respiratory Disease in Humans and Horses Due to a Previously Unrecognized ParamyxovirusQ77553051
P433issue1
P921main subjectHendra virusQ1604979
animal behaviourQ2990593
P304page(s)26-38
P577publication date2015-09-24
P1433published inEcoHealthQ15754575
P1476titleLandscape Utilisation, Animal Behaviour and Hendra Virus Risk
P478volume13

Reverse relations

cites work (P2860)
Q33560724"Why won't they just vaccinate?" Horse owner risk perception and uptake of the Hendra virus vaccine
Q56551550Changing resource landscapes and spillover of henipaviruses
Q33844130Daytime behavior of Pteropus vampyrus in a natural habitat: the driver of viral transmission
Q51784790Domesticated animals as hosts of henipaviruses and filoviruses: A systematic review
Q55446645Environmental drivers of spatiotemporal foraging intensity in fruit bats and implications for Hendra virus ecology.
Q98580079Extreme mobility of the world's largest flying mammals creates key challenges for management and conservation
Q47551564Hendra Virus Spillover is a Bimodal System Driven by Climatic Factors.
Q37422736Models of Eucalypt phenology predict bat population flux
Q40492396No Evidence of Hendra Virus Infection in the Australian Flying-fox Ectoparasite Genus Cyclopodia
Q51147992Optimal foraging in seasonal environments: implications for residency of Australian flying foxes in food-subsidized urban landscapes.
Q40384761Risk Mitigation of Emerging Zoonoses: Hendra Virus and Non-Vaccinating Horse Owners
Q35808504Routes of Hendra Virus Excretion in Naturally-Infected Flying-Foxes: Implications for Viral Transmission and Spillover Risk
Q40082010The impact of human population pressure on flying fox niches and the potential consequences for Hendra virus spillover
Q40631593Twenty years of Hendra virus: laboratory submission trends and risk factors for infection in horses
Q30235302Who acquires infection from whom and how? Disentangling multi-host and multi-mode transmission dynamics in the 'elimination' era.

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