نتایج جستجو برای: bats

تعداد نتایج: 7216  

Journal: :Emerging Infectious Diseases 2009
Suxiang Tong Christina Conrardy Susan Ruone Ivan V. Kuzmin Xiling Guo Ying Tao Michael Niezgoda Lia Haynes Bernard Agwanda Robert F. Breiman Larry J. Anderson Charles E. Rupprecht

Diverse coronaviruses have been identified in bats from several continents but not from Africa. We identified group 1 and 2 coronaviruses in bats in Kenya, including SARS-related coronaviruses. The sequence diversity suggests that bats are well-established reservoirs for and likely sources of coronaviruses for many species, including humans.

2006
Ivan V. Kuzmin Michael Niezgoda Darin S. Carroll Natalie Keeler Mohammed Jahangir Hossain Robert F. Breiman Thomas G. Ksiazek Charles E. Rupprecht

Lyssavirus surveillance in bats was performed in Bangladesh during 2003 and 2004. No virus isolates were obtained. Three serum samples (all from Pteropus giganteus, n = 127) of 288 total serum samples, obtained from bats in 9 different taxa, neutralized lyssaviruses Aravan and Khujand. The infection occurs in bats in Bangladesh, but virus prevalence appears low.

2018
Eric D. Laing Ian H. Mendenhall Martin Linster Dolyce H. W. Low Yihui Chen Lianying Yan Spencer L. Sterling Sophie Borthwick Erica Sena Neves Julia S. L. Lim Maggie Skiles Benjamin P. Y.-H. Lee Lin-Fa Wang Christopher C. Broder Gavin J. D. Smith

To determine whether fruit bats in Singapore have been exposed to filoviruses, we screened 409 serum samples from bats of 3 species by using a multiplex assay that detects antibodies against filoviruses. Positive samples reacted with glycoproteins from Bundibugyo, Ebola, and Sudan viruses, indicating filovirus circulation among bats in Southeast Asia.

2010
Andrew C. Breed Meng Yu Jennifer A. Barr Gary Crameri Claudia M. Thalmann Lin-Fa Wang

To determine seroprevalence of viruses in bats in Papua New Guinea, we sampled 66 bats at 3 locations. We found a seroprevalence of 55% for henipavirus (Hendra or Nipah virus) and 56% for rubulavirus (Tioman or Menangle virus). Notably, 36% of bats surveyed contained antibodies to both types of viruses, indicating concurrent or consecutive infection.

2010
Natália Martínková Peter Bačkor Tomáš Bartonička Pavla Blažková Jaroslav Červený Lukáš Falteisek Jiří Gaisler Vladimír Hanzal Daniel Horáček Zdeněk Hubálek Helena Jahelková Miroslav Kolařík L'uboš Korytár Alena Kubátová Blanka Lehotská Roman Lehotský Radek K. Lučan Ondřej Májek Jan Matějů Zdeněk Řehák Jiří Šafář Přemysl Tájek Emil Tkadlec Marcel Uhrin Josef Wagner Dita Weinfurtová Jan Zima Jan Zukal Ivan Horáček

BACKGROUND White-nose syndrome is a disease of hibernating insectivorous bats associated with the fungus Geomyces destructans. It first appeared in North America in 2006, where over a million bats died since then. In Europe, G. destructans was first identified in France in 2009. Its distribution, infection dynamics, and effects on hibernating bats in Europe are largely unknown. METHODOLOGY/PR...

Journal: :Medicine and science in sports and exercise 2002
Joseph J Crisco Richard M Greenwald Jeffrey D Blume Lorraine H Penna

INTRODUCTION/PURPOSE Although metal baseball bats are widely believed to outperform wood bats, there are few scientific studies which support this. In a batting cage study, Greenwald et al. found that baseballs hit with a metal bat traveled faster than those hit with a wood bat, but the factors responsible for this difference in bat performance remain unidentified. The purpose of this study was...

Journal: :PLoS ONE 2008
Annemarie Surlykke Elisabeth K. V. Kalko

Echolocating bats have successfully exploited a broad range of habitats and prey. Much research has demonstrated how time-frequency structure of echolocation calls of different species is adapted to acoustic constraints of habitats and foraging behaviors. However, the intensity of bat calls has been largely neglected although intensity is a key factor determining echolocation range and interact...

Journal: :Science 2006
Jorge Salazar-Bravo Carleton J Phillips Robert D Bradley Robert J Baker Terry L Yates Luis A Ruedas

apparently on the basis of an unsubstantiated report (1). Li et al.’s data confirm that horseshoe bats are a reservoir for a coronavirus related to SARS-CoV found in humans and the virus isolated from palm civets, but this does not make them the reservoir for SARS-CoV. Dobson’s linking of bats to emerging diseases caused by Ebola and Marburg viruses is speculative and does not agree with publis...

2010
Diane H. Theriault Zheng Wu Nickolay I. Hristov Sharon M. Swartz Kenneth S. Breuer Thomas H. Kunz Margrit Betke

The Brazilian free-tailed bat, Tadarida brasiliensis, roosts in very large colonies, consisting of hundreds of thousands of individuals. Each night, bats emerge from their day roosts in dense columns in a highly coordinated manner. We recorded short segments of an emergence using three spatially-calibrated and temporallysynchronized thermal infrared cameras. We applied stereoscopic methods to r...

Journal: :Science 2008
Kimberly Williams-Guillén Ivette Perfecto John Vandermeer

Exclosure experiments have demonstrated the effects of bird predation on arthropods. In a Mexican coffee plantation, we excluded foliage-gleaning bird and bat predators from coffee plants. Effects of bats and birds were additive. In the dry season, birds reduced arthropods in coffee plants by 30%; birds and bats together reduced arthropods by 46%. In the wet season, bats reduced arthropods by 8...

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