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      Pathogenicity for chickens of avian influenza viruses isolated from whistling swans and a black-tailed gull in Japan.

      Avian diseases
      Animal Population Groups, microbiology, Animals, Animals, Wild, Birds, Chick Embryo, Chickens, Ducks, Influenza A virus, pathogenicity, Japan, Specific Pathogen-Free Organisms, Terminology as Topic

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          Abstract

          We isolated 24 Hav1 Neq1 and 18 Hav6 Nav3 influenza viruses from such free-living wild waterfowl as whistling swans, black-tailed gulls, and tufted ducks in western Japan in 1980. Two Hav1 Neq1 viruses isolated from a whistling swan and a black-tailed gull and a Hav6 Nav3 virus from a whistling swan were examined for their pathogenicity for chickens. Five-week-old specific-pathogen-free chickens were inoculated with the viruses intratracheally or intraperitoneally. Virus was recovered successfully from all the organs, including the brain, despite the absence of signs of disease. The intracerebral pathogenicity index scores obtained for the Hav1 Neq1 viruses were 0.43 and 0.87; the score for the Hav6 Nav3 virus was 0.43. No virus produced plaques in cultivated chick embryo fibroblast cells in the absence of trypsin.

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