Avian Influenza Viruses in Wild Birds in Canada Following Incursions of Highly Pathogenic H5N1 Virus from Eurasia in 2021/2022
Jolene A. Giacinti,Anthony V. Signore,Megan E. B. Jones,Laura Bourque,Stephane Lair,Claire Jardine,Brian Stevens,Trent Bollinger,Dayna Goldsmith,Margo Pybus,Iga Stasiak,Richard Davis,Neil Pople,Larissa Nituch,Rodney W. Brook,Davor Ojkic,Ariane Masse, Gabrielle Dimitri-Masson,Glen J. Parsons,Meghan Baker,Carmencita Yason,Jane Harms, Naima Jutha, Jon Neely,Yohannes Berhane,Oliver Lung, Shannon K. French, Lawrna Myers,Jennifer F. Provencher,Stephanie Avery-Gomm,Gregory J. Robertson,Tatsiana Barychka, Kirsty E. B. Gurney,Jordan Wight,Ishraq Rahman,Kathryn Hargan,Andrew S. Lang,William A. Montevecchi,Tori V. Burt, Michael G. C. Brown, Cynthia Pekarik, Trevor Thompson,Angela Mclaughlin, Megan Willie,Laurie Wilson,Scott A. Flemming, Megan V. Ross, Jim Leafloor, Frank Baldwin, Chris Sharp, Hannah Lewis,Matthieu Beaumont, Al Hanson,Robert A. Ronconi, Eric Reed, Margaret Campbell, Michelle Saunders,Catherine Soos MBIO(2024)
Key words
avian influenza,highly pathogenic avian influenza virus,low pathogenicity avian influenza virus,wild birds,reservoir,surveillance
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example

Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper