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Volume 30, Number 7—July 2024
Dispatch

Orthohantaviruses in Misiones Province, Northeastern Argentina

María Victoria VadellComments to Author , Eliana Florencia Burgos, Daniela Lamattina, Carla Bellomo, Valeria Martínez, Rocío Coelho, Cecilia Lanzone, Carolina Alicia Labaroni, Laura Tauro, Oscar Daniel Salomón, and Isabel Elisa Gómez Villafañe
Author affiliations: Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas (CONICET), Buenos Aires, Argentina (M.V. Vadell, E.F. Burgos, D. Lamattina, L. Tauro, O.D. Salomón, I.E.G. Gómez Villafañe); Instituto Nacional de Medicina Tropical, ANLIS Dr. C.G. Malbrán, Puerto Iguazú, Argentina (M.V. Vadell, E.F. Burgos, D. Lamattina, O.D. Salomón); Instituto Nacional de Enfermedades Infecciosas, ANLIS Dr. C.G. Malbrán, Buenos Aires (C. Bellomo, V. Martínez, R. Coelho); Instituto de Biología Subtropical (UNaM–CONICET), Misiones, Argentina (C. Lanzone, C.A. Labaroni, L. Tauro); Instituto de Ecología, Genética y Evolución de Buenos Aires (CONICET-UBA), Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales, Universidad de Buenos Aires, Buenos Aires (I.E. Gómez Villafañe)

Main Article

Figure 1

Study areas (green dots) in Misiones Province and part of Corrientes Province (first-level subnational administrative division) in study of orthohantavirus, northeastern Argentina. The Selva Paranaense (Alto Paraná Atlantic Forest) ecoregion is shown in green and Campos y Malezales (savanna-like ecoregion) is shown in yellow. Mouse icons indicate the sites where seropositive Oligoryzomys sp. rodents (in orange) and Akodon affinis montensis mice (in blue) were detected.

Figure 1. Study areas (green dots) in Misiones Province and part of Corrientes Province (first-level subnational administrative division) in study of orthohantavirus, northeastern Argentina. The Selva Paranaense (Alto Paraná Atlantic Forest) ecoregion is shown in green and Campos y Malezales (savanna-like ecoregion) is shown in yellow. Mouse icons indicate the sites where seropositive Oligoryzomys sp. rodents (in orange) and Akodon affinis montensis mice (in blue) were detected.

Main Article

Page created: May 10, 2024
Page updated: June 22, 2024
Page reviewed: June 22, 2024
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