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Volume 29, Number 5—May 2023
Synopsis

Phylogenetic Analysis of Transmission Dynamics of Dengue in Large and Small Population Centers, Northern Ecuador

Sully MárquezComments to Author , Gwenyth Lee, Bernardo Gutiérrez, Shannon Bennett, Josefina Coloma1, Joseph N.S. Eisenberg1, and Gabriel Trueba1
Author affiliations: Universidad San Francisco de Quito, Quito, Ecuador (S. Márquez, B. Gutiérrez, G. Trueba); University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA (G. Lee, J.N.S. Eisenberg); University of Oxford, Oxford, UK (B. Gutiérrez); Institute for Biodiversity Science and Sustainability, California Academy of Sciences, San Francisco, California, USA (S. Bennett); University of California, Berkeley, Berkeley, California, USA (J. Coloma)

Main Article

Figure 6

Subclade tree of dengue virus serotype 1 from rural communities of Esmeraldas Province in study of transmission dynamics of dengue in large and small population centers, northern Ecuador. Gradient of remoteness is classified as remote communities with no road access (green), communities with road access (pink), commercial center (yellow), and urban (blue). Subclade nodes are labeled with posterior probabilities generated in BEAST software (https://beast.community).

Figure 6. Subclade tree of dengue virus serotype 1 from rural communities of Esmeraldas Province in study of transmission dynamics of dengue in large and small population centers, northern Ecuador. Gradient of remoteness is classified as remote communities with no road access (green), communities with road access (pink), commercial center (yellow), and urban (blue). Subclade nodes are labeled with posterior probabilities generated in BEAST software (https://beast.community).

Main Article

1These senior authors contributed equally to this article.

Page created: March 14, 2023
Page updated: April 18, 2023
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